The Project Gutenberg Etext of History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire
Volume 2
#2 in our format series by Edward Gibbon, Esq. With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check
the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!!
Please take a look at the important information in this header.
We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an
electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this.
**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations*
Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and
further information is included below. We need your donations.
History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire Volume 2
by Edward Gibbon, Esq. With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
April, 1997 [Etext # 891]
The Project Gutenberg Etext of History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire
Volume 2
*****This file should be named dfre210.txt or dfre210.zip******
Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, dfre211.txt.
VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, dfre210a.txt.
Scanned, proofed and converted to HTML by David Reed. Dale R. Fredrickson who entered the
Greek characters in the footnotes and who has suggested retaining the conjoined ae character in
the text.
We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance
of the official release dates, for time for better editing.
Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till
midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at
Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an
up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes
in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has
a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a
look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a
new copy has at least one byte more or less.
Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
fifty hours is one conservative estimate for how long it we take
to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This
projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value
per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-two text
files per month: or 400 more Etexts in 1996 for a total of 800.
If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the
total should reach 80 billion Etexts.
The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext
Files by the December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000=Trillion]
This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
which is only 10% of the present number of computer users. 2001
should have at least twice as many computer users as that, so it
will require us reaching less than 5% of the users in 2001.
We need your donations more than ever!
All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are
tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie-
Mellon University).
For these and other matters, please mail to:
Project Gutenberg
P. O. Box 2782
Champaign, IL 61825
When all other email fails try our Executive Director:
Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
We would prefer to send you this information by email
(Internet, Bitnet, Compuserve, ATTMAIL or MCImail).
******
If you have an FTP program (or emulator), please
FTP directly to the Project Gutenberg archives:
[Mac users, do NOT point and click. . .type]
ftp uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu
login: anonymous
password: your@login
cd etext/etext90 through /etext96
or cd etext/articles [get suggest gut for more information]
dir [to see files]
get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files]
GET INDEX?00.GUT
for a list of books
and
GET NEW GUT for general information
and
MGET GUT* for newsletters.
**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor**
(Three Pages)
***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START***
Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from
someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to.
*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT
By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by
sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical
medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS
This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-
tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor
Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at
Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other
things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
distribute it in the United States without permission and
without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext
under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable
efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any
medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer
codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this
etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of
receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
time to the person you received it from. If you received it
on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
receive it electronically.
THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
may have other legal rights.
INDEMNITY
You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors,
officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost
and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or
indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause:
[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification,
or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect.
DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by
disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
or:
[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable
binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
including any form resulting from conversion by word pro-
cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as
*EITHER*:
[*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
does *not* contain characters other than those
intended by the author of the work, although tilde
(~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
be used to convey punctuation intended by the
author, and additional characters may be used to
indicate hypertext links; OR
[*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at
no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
form by the program that displays the etext (as is
the case, for instance, with most word processors);
OR
[*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
or other equivalent proprietary form).
[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this
"Small Print!" statement.
[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the
net profits you derive calculated using the method you
already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon
University" within the 60 days following each
date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare)
your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return.
WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time,
scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty
free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution
you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg
Association / Carnegie-Mellon University".
*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
This is volume two of the six volumes of Edward Gibbon's History Of The Decline And Fall Of
The Roman Empire. If you find any errors please feel free to notify me of them. I want to make
this the best etext edition possible for both scholars and the general public. I would like to thank
those who have helped in making this text better. Especially Dale R. Fredrickson who has hand
entered the Greek characters in the footnotes and who has suggested retaining the conjoined ae
character in the text. Haradda@aol.com and davidr@inconnect.com are my email addresses for
now. Please feel free to send me your comments and I hope you enjoy this.
David Reed
History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire
Edward Gibbon, Esq.
With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
Vol. 2
1782 (Written), 1845 (Revised)
Chapter XVI * Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine.
Part I.
The Conduct Of The Roman Government Towards The Christians, From The Reign Of Nero To
That Of Constantine.
If we seriously consider the purity of the Christian religion, the sanctity of its moral precepts,
and the innocent as well as austere lives of the greater number of those who during the first ages
embraced the faith of the gospel, we should naturally suppose, that so benevolent a doctrine
would have been received with due reverence, even by the unbelieving world; that the learned
and the polite, however they may deride the miracles, would have esteemed the virtues, of the
new sect; and that the magistrates, instead of persecuting, would have protected an order of men
who yielded the most passive obedience to the laws, though they declined the active cares of war
and government. If, on the other hand, we recollect the universal toleration of Polytheism, as it
was invariably maintained by the faith of the people, the incredulity of philosophers, and the
policy of the Roman senate and emperors, we are at a loss to discover what new offence the
Christians had committed, what new provocation could exasperate the mild indifference of
antiquity, and what new motives could urge the Roman princes, who beheld without concern a
thousand forms of religion subsisting in peace under their gentle sway, to inflict a severe
punishment on any part of their subjects, who had chosen for themselves a singular but an
inoffensive mode of faith and worship.
The religious policy of the ancient world seems to have assumed a more stern and intolerant
character, to oppose the progress of Christianity. About fourscore years after the death of Christ,
his innocent disciples were punished with death by the sentence of a proconsul of the most
amiable and philosophic character, and according to the laws of an emperor distinguished by the
wisdom and justice of his general administration. The apologies which were repeatedly
addressed to the successors of Trajan are filled with the most pathetic complaints, that the
Christians, who obeyed the dictates, and solicited the liberty, of conscience, were alone, among
all the subjects of the Roman empire, excluded from the common benefits of their auspicious
government. The deaths of a few eminent martyrs have been recorded with care; and from the
time that Christianity was invested with the supreme power, the governors of the church have
been no less diligently employed in displaying the cruelty, than in imitating the conduct, of their
Pagan adversaries. To separate (if it be possible) a few authentic as well as interesting facts from
an undigested mass of fiction and error, and to relate, in a clear and rational manner, the causes,
the extent, the duration, and the most important circumstances of the persecutions to which the
first Christians were exposed, is the design of the present chapter. *
The sectaries of a persecuted religion, depressed by fear animated with resentment, and perhaps
heated by enthusiasm, are seldom in a proper temper of mind calmly to investigate, or candidly
to appreciate, the motives of their enemies, which often escape the impartial and discerning
view even of those who are placed at a secure distance from the flames of persecution. A reason
has been assigned for the conduct of the emperors towards the primitive Christians, which may
appear the more specious and probable as it is drawn from the acknowledged genius of
Polytheism. It has already been observed, that the religious concord of the world was principally
supported by the implicit assent and reverence which the nations of antiquity expressed for their
respective traditions and ceremonies. It might therefore be expected, that they would unite with
indignation against any sect or people which should separate itself from the communion of
mankind, and claiming the exclusive possession of divine knowledge, should disdain every form
of worship, except its own, as impious and idolatrous. The rights of toleration were held by
mutual indulgence: they were justly forfeited by a refusal of the accustomed tribute. As the
payment of this tribute was inflexibly refused by the Jews, and by them alone, the consideration
of the treatment which they experienced from the Roman magistrates, will serve to explain how
far these speculations are justified by facts, and will lead us to discover the true causes of the
persecution of Christianity.
Without repeating what has already been mentioned of the reverence of the Roman princes and
governors for the temple of Jerusalem, we shall only observe, that the destruction of the temple
and city was accompanied and followed by every circumstance that could exasperate the minds
of the conquerors, and authorize religious persecution by the most specious arguments of
political justice and the public safety. From the reign of Nero to that of Antoninus Pius, the Jews
discovered a fierce impatience of the dominion of Rome, which repeatedly broke out in the most
furious massacres and insurrections. Humanity is shocked at the recital of the horrid cruelties
which they committed in the cities of Egypt, of Cyprus, and of Cyrene, where they dwelt in
treacherous friendship with the unsuspecting natives; and we are tempted to applaud the severe
retaliation which was exercised by the arms of the legions against a race of fanatics, whose dire
and credulous superstition seemed to render them the implacable enemies not only of the Roman
government, but of human kind. The enthusiasm of the Jews was supported by the opinion, that
it was unlawful for them to pay taxes to an idolatrous master; and by the flattering promise
which they derived from their ancient oracles, that a conquering Messiah would soon arise,
destined to break their fetters, and to invest the favorites of heaven with the empire of the earth.
It was by announcing himself as their long-expected deliverer, and by calling on all the
descendants of Abraham to assert the hope of Isræl, that the famous Barchochebas collected a
formidable army, with which he resisted during two years the power of the emperor Hadrian.
Notwithstanding these repeated provocations, the resentment of the Roman princes expired after
the victory; nor were their apprehensions continued beyond the period of war and danger. By the
general indulgence of polytheism, and by the mild temper of Antoninus Pius, the Jews were
restored to their ancient privileges, and once more obtained the permission of circumcising their
children, with the easy restraint, that they should never confer on any foreign proselyte that
distinguishing mark of the Hebrew race. The numerous remains of that people, though they
were still excluded from the precincts of Jerusalem, were permitted to form and to maintain
considerable establishments both in Italy and in the provinces, to acquire the freedom of Rome,
to enjoy municipal honors, and to obtain at the same time an exemption from the burdensome
and expensive offices of society. The moderation or the contempt of the Romans gave a legal
sanction to the form of ecclesiastical police which was instituted by the vanquished sect. The
patriarch, who had fixed his residence at Tiberias, was empowered to appoint his subordinate
ministers and apostles, to exercise a domestic jurisdiction, and to receive from his dispersed
brethren an annual contribution. New synagogues were frequently erected in the principal cities
of the empire; and the sabbaths, the fasts, and the festivals, which were either commanded by the
Mosaic law, or enjoined by the traditions of the Rabbis, were celebrated in the most solemn and
public manner. Such gentle treatment insensibly assuaged the stern temper of the Jews.
Awakened from their dream of prophecy and conquest, they assumed the behavior of peaceable
and industrious subjects. Their irreconcilable hatred of mankind, instead of flaming out in acts
of blood and violence, evaporated in less dangerous gratifications. They embraced every
opportunity of overreaching the idolaters in trade; and they pronounced secret and ambiguous
imprecations against the haughty kingdom of Edom.
Since the Jews, who rejected with abhorrence the deities adored by their sovereign and by their
fellow-subjects, enjoyed, however, the free exercise of their unsocial religion, there must have
existed some other cause, which exposed the disciples of Christ to those severities from which
the posterity of Abraham was exempt. The difference between them is simple and obvious; but,
according to the sentiments of antiquity, it was of the highest importance. The Jews were a
nation; the Christians were a sect: and if it was natural for every community to respect the
sacred institutions of their neighbors, it was incumbent on them to persevere in those of their
ancestors. The voice of oracles, the precepts of philosophers, and the authority of the laws,
unanimously enforced this national obligation. By their lofty claim of superior sanctity the Jews
might provoke the Polytheists to consider them as an odious and impure race. By disdaining the
intercourse of other nations, they might deserve their contempt. The laws of Moses might be for
the most part frivolous or absurd; yet, since they had been received during many ages by a large
society, his followers were justified by the example of mankind; and it was universally
acknowledged, that they had a right to practise what it would have been criminal in them to
neglect. But this principle, which protected the Jewish synagogue, afforded not any favor or
security to the primitive church. By embracing the faith of the gospel, the Christians incurred the
supposed guilt of an unnatural and unpardonable offence. They dissolved the sacred ties of
custom and education, violated the religious institutions of their country, and presumptuously
despised whatever their fathers had believed as true, or had reverenced as sacred. Nor was this
apostasy (if we may use the expression) merely of a partial or local kind; since the pious deserter
who withdrew himself from the temples of Egypt or Syria, would equally disdain to seek an
asylum in those of Athens or Carthage. Every Christian rejected with contempt the superstitions
of his family, his city, and his province. The whole body of Christians unanimously refused to
hold any communion with the gods of Rome, of the empire, and of mankind. It was in vain that
the oppressed believer asserted the inalienable rights of conscience and private judgment.
Though his situation might excite the pity, his arguments could never reach the understanding,
either of the philosophic or of the believing part of the Pagan world. To their apprehensions, it
was no less a matter of surprise, that any individuals should entertain scruples against complying
with the established mode of worship, than if they had conceived a sudden abhorrence to the
manners, the dress, or the language of their native country. *
The surprise of the Pagans was soon succeeded by resentment; and the most pious of men were
exposed to the unjust but dangerous imputation of impiety. Malice and prejudice concurred in
representing the Christians as a society of atheists, who, by the most daring attack on the
religious constitution of the empire, had merited the severest animadversion of the civil
magistrate. They had separated themselves (they gloried in the confession) from every mode of
superstition which was received in any part of the globe by the various temper of polytheism: but
it was not altogether so evident what deity, or what form of worship, they had substituted to the
gods and temples of antiquity. The pure and sublime idea which they entertained of the Supreme
Being escaped the gross conception of the Pagan multitude, who were at a loss to discover a
spiritual and solitary God, that was neither represented under any corporeal figure or visible
symbol, nor was adored with the accustomed pomp of libations and festivals, of altars and
sacrifices. The sages of Greece and Rome, who had elevated their minds to the contemplation
of the existence and attributes of the First Cause, were induced by reason or by vanity to reserve
for themselves and their chosen disciples the privilege of this philosophical devotion. They were
far from admitting the prejudices of mankind as the standard of truth, but they considered them
as flowing from the original disposition of human nature; and they supposed that any popular
mode of faith and worship which presumed to disclaim the assistance of the senses, would, in
proportion as it receded from superstition, find itself incapable of restraining the wanderings of
the fancy, and the visions of fanaticism. The careless glance which men of wit and learning
condescended to cast on the Christian revelation, served only to confirm their hasty opinion, and
to persuade them that the principle, which they might have revered, of the Divine Unity, was
defaced by the wild enthusiasm, and annihilated by the airy speculations, of the new sectaries.
The author of a celebrated dialogue, which has been attributed to Lucian, whilst he affects to
treat the mysterious subject of the Trinity in a style of ridicule and contempt, betrays his own
ignorance of the weakness of human reason, and of the inscrutable nature of the divine
perfections.
It might appear less surprising, that the founder of Christianity should not only be revered by his
disciples as a sage and a prophet, but that he should be adored as a God. The Polytheists were
disposed to adopt every article of faith, which seemed to offer any resemblance, however distant
or imperfect, with the popular mythology; and the legends of Bacchus, of Hercules, and of
Æsculapius, had, in some measure, prepared their imagination for the appearance of the Son of
God under a human form. But they were astonished that the Christians should abandon the
temples of those ancient heroes, who, in the infancy of the world, had invented arts, instituted
laws, and vanquished the tyrants or monsters who infested the earth, in order to choose for the
exclusive object of their religious worship an obscure teacher, who, in a recent age, and among a
barbarous people, had fallen a sacrifice either to the malice of his own countrymen, or to the
jealousy of the Roman government. The Pagan multitude, reserving their gratitude for temporal
benefits alone, rejected the inestimable present of life and immortality, which was offered to
mankind by Jesus of Nazareth. His mild constancy in the midst of cruel and voluntary sufferings,
his universal benevolence, and the sublime simplicity of his actions and character, were
insufficient, in the opinion of those carnal men, to compensate for the want of fame, of empire,
and of success; and whilst they refused to acknowledge his stupendous triumph over the powers
of darkness and of the grave, they misrepresented, or they insulted, the equivocal birth,
wandering life, and ignominious death, of the divine Author of Christianity.
The personal guilt which every Christian had contracted, in thus preferring his private sentiment
to the national religion, was aggravated in a very high degree by the number and union of the
criminals. It is well known, and has been already observed, that Roman policy viewed with the
utmost jealousy and distrust any association among its subjects; and that the privileges of private
corporations, though formed for the most harmless or beneficial purposes, were bestowed with a
very sparing hand. The religious assemblies of the Christians who had separated themselves
from the public worship, appeared of a much less innocent nature; they were illegal in their
principle, and in their consequences might become dangerous; nor were the emperors conscious
that they violated the laws of justice, when, for the peace of society, they prohibited those secret
and sometimes nocturnal meetings. The pious disobedience of the Christians made their
conduct, or perhaps their designs, appear in a much more serious and criminal light; and the
Roman princes, who might perhaps have suffered themselves to be disarmed by a ready
submission, deeming their honor concerned in the execution of their commands, sometimes
attempted, by rigorous punishments, to subdue this independent spirit, which boldly
acknowledged an authority superior to that of the magistrate. The extent and duration of this
spiritual conspiracy seemed to render it everyday more deserving of his animadversion. We have
already seen that the active and successful zeal of the Christians had insensibly diffused them
through every province and almost every city of the empire. The new converts seemed to
renounce their family and country, that they might connect themselves in an indissoluble band of
union with a peculiar society, which every where assumed a different character from the rest of
mankind. Their gloomy and austere aspect, their abhorrence of the common business and
pleasures of life, and their frequent predictions of impending calamities, inspired the Pagans
with the apprehension of some danger, which would arise from the new sect, the more alarming
as it was the more obscure. "Whatever," says Pliny, "may be the principle of their conduct, their
inflexible obstinacy appeared deserving of punishment."
The precautions with which the disciples of Christ performed the offices of religion were at first
dictated by fear and necessity; but they were continued from choice. By imitating the awful
secrecy which reigned in the Eleusinian mysteries, the Christians had flattered themselves that
they should render their sacred institutions more respectable in the eyes of the Pagan world. But
the event, as it often happens to the operations of subtile policy, deceived their wishes and their
expectations. It was concluded, that they only concealed what they would have blushed to
disclose. Their mistaken prudence afforded an opportunity for malice to invent, and for
suspicious credulity to believe, the horrid tales which described the Christians as the most
wicked of human kind, who practised in their dark recesses every abomination that a depraved
fancy could suggest, and who solicited the favor of their unknown God by the sacrifice of every
moral virtue. There were many who pretended to confess or to relate the ceremonies of this
abhorred society. It was asserted, "that a new-born infant, entirely covered over with flour, was
presented, like some mystic symbol of initiation, to the knife of the proselyte, who unknowingly
inflicted many a secret and mortal wound on the innocent victim of his error; that as soon as the
cruel deed was perpetrated, the sectaries drank up the blood, greedily tore asunder the quivering
members, and pledged themselves to eternal secrecy, by a mutual consciousness of guilt. It was
as confidently affirmed, that this inhuman sacrifice was succeeded by a suitable entertainment,
in which intemperance served as a provocative to brutal lust; till, at the appointed moment, the
lights were suddenly extinguished, shame was banished, nature was forgotten; and, as accident
might direct, the darkness of the night was polluted by the incestuous commerce of sisters and
brothers, of sons and of mothers."
But the perusal of the ancient apologies was sufficient to remove even the slightest suspicion
from the mind of a candid adversary. The Christians, with the intrepid security of innocence,
appeal from the voice of rumor to the equity of the magistrates. They acknowledge, that if any
proof can be produced of the crimes which calumny has imputed to them, they are worthy of the
most severe punishment. They provoke the punishment, and they challenge the proof. At the
same time they urge, with equal truth and propriety, that the charge is not less devoid of
probability, than it is destitute of evidence; they ask, whether any one can seriously believe that
the pure and holy precepts of the gospel, which so frequently restrain the use of the most lawful
enjoyments, should inculcate the practice of the most abominable crimes; that a large society
should resolve to dishonor itself in the eyes of its own members; and that a great number of
persons of either sex, and every age and character, insensible to the fear of death or infamy,
should consent to violate those principles which nature and education had imprinted most deeply
in their minds. Nothing, it should seem, could weaken the force or destroy the effect of so
unanswerable a justification, unless it were the injudicious conduct of the apologists themselves,
who betrayed the common cause of religion, to gratify their devout hatred to the domestic
enemies of the church. It was sometimes faintly insinuated, and sometimes boldly asserted, that
the same bloody sacrifices, and the same incestuous festivals, which were so falsely ascribed to
the orthodox believers, were in reality celebrated by the Marcionites, by the Carpocratians, and
by several other sects of the Gnostics, who, notwithstanding they might deviate into the paths of
heresy, were still actuated by the sentiments of men, and still governed by the precepts of
Christianity. Accusations of a similar kind were retorted upon the church by the schismatics
who had departed from its communion, and it was confessed on all sides, that the most
scandalous licentiousness of manners prevailed among great numbers of those who affected the
name of Christians. A Pagan magistrate, who possessed neither leisure nor abilities to discern
the almost imperceptible line which divides the orthodox faith from heretical pravity, might
easily have imagined that their mutual animosity had extorted the discovery of their common
guilt. It was fortunate for the repose, or at least for the reputation, of the first Christians, that the
magistrates sometimes proceeded with more temper and moderation than is usually consistent
with religious zeal, and that they reported, as the impartial result of their judicial inquiry, that
the sectaries, who had deserted the established worship, appeared to them sincere in their
professions, and blameless in their manners; however they might incur, by their absurd and
excessive superstition, the censure of the laws.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part II.
History, which undertakes to record the transactions of the past, for the instruction of future
ages, would ill deserve that honorable office, if she condescended to plead the cause of tyrants,
or to justify the maxims of persecution. It must, however, be acknowledged, that the conduct of
the emperors who appeared the least favorable to the primitive church, is by no means so
criminal as that of modern sovereigns, who have employed the arm of violence and terror
against the religious opinions of any part of their subjects. From their reflections, or even from
their own feelings, a Charles V. or a Lewis XIV. might have acquired a just knowledge of the
rights of conscience, of the obligation of faith, and of the innocence of error. But the princes and
magistrates of ancient Rome were strangers to those principles which inspired and authorized
the inflexible obstinacy of the Christians in the cause of truth, nor could they themselves
discover in their own breasts any motive which would have prompted them to refuse a legal, and
as it were a natural, submission to the sacred institutions of their country. The same reason
which contributes to alleviate the guilt, must have tended to abate the vigor, of their
persecutions. As they were actuated, not by the furious zeal of bigots, but by the temperate
policy of legislators, contempt must often have relaxed, and humanity must frequently have
suspended, the execution of those laws which they enacted against the humble and obscure
followers of Christ. From the general view of their character and motives we might naturally
conclude: I. That a considerable time elapsed before they considered the new sectaries as an
object deserving of the attention of government. II. That in the conviction of any of their subjects
who were accused of so very singular a crime, they proceeded with caution and reluctance. III.
That they were moderate in the use of punishments; and, IV. That the afflicted church enjoyed
many intervals of peace and tranquility. Notwithstanding the careless indifference which the
most copious and the most minute of the Pagan writers have shown to the affairs of the
Christians, it may still be in our power to confirm each of these probable suppositions, by the
evidence of authentic facts.
1. By the wise dispensation of Providence, a mysterious veil was cast over the infancy of the
church, which, till the faith of the Christians was matured, and their numbers were multiplied,
served to protect them not only from the malice but even from the knowledge of the Pagan
world. The slow and gradual abolition of the Mosaic ceremonies afforded a safe and innocent
disguise to the more early proselytes of the gospel. As they were, for the greater part, of the race
of Abraham, they were distinguished by the peculiar mark of circumcision, offered up their
devotions in the Temple of Jerusalem till its final destruction, and received both the Law and the
Prophets as the genuine inspirations of the Deity. The Gentile converts, who by a spiritual
adoption had been associated to the hope of Isræl, were likewise confounded under the garb and
appearance of Jews, and as the Polytheists paid less regard to articles of faith than to the
external worship, the new sect, which carefully concealed, or faintly announced, its future
greatness and ambition, was permitted to shelter itself under the general toleration which was
granted to an ancient and celebrated people in the Roman empire. It was not long, perhaps,
before the Jews themselves, animated with a fiercer zeal and a more jealous faith, perceived the
gradual separation of their Nazarene brethren from the doctrine of the synagogue; and they
would gladly have extinguished the dangerous heresy in the blood of its adherents. But the
decrees of Heaven had already disarmed their malice; and though they might sometimes exert
the licentious privilege of sedition, they no longer possessed the administration of criminal
justice; nor did they find it easy to infuse into the calm breast of a Roman magistrate the rancor
of their own zeal and prejudice. The provincial governors declared themselves ready to listen to
any accusation that might affect the public safety; but as soon as they were informed that it was
a question not of facts but of words, a dispute relating only to the interpretation of the Jewish
laws and prophecies, they deemed it unworthy of the majesty of Rome seriously to discuss the
obscure differences which might arise among a barbarous and superstitious people. The
innocence of the first Christians was protected by ignorance and contempt; and the tribunal of
the Pagan magistrate often proved their most assured refuge against the fury of the synagogue. If
indeed we were disposed to adopt the traditions of a too credulous antiquity, we might relate the
distant peregrinations, the wonderful achievements, and the various deaths of the twelve
apostles: but a more accurate inquiry will induce us to doubt, whether any of those persons who
had been witnesses to the miracles of Christ were permitted, beyond the limits of Palestine, to
seal with their blood the truth of their testimony. From the ordinary term of human life, it may
very naturally be presumed that most of them were deceased before the discontent of the Jews
broke out into that furious war, which was terminated only by the ruin of Jerusalem. During a
long period, from the death of Christ to that memorable rebellion, we cannot discover any traces
of Roman intolerance, unless they are to be found in the sudden, the transient, but the cruel
persecution, which was exercised by Nero against the Christians of the capital, thirty-five years
after the former, and only two years before the latter, of those great events. The character of the
philosophic historian, to whom we are principally indebted for the knowledge of this singular
transaction, would alone be sufficient to recommend it to our most attentive consideration.
In the tenth year of the reign of Nero, the capital of the empire was afflicted by a fire which
raged beyond the memory or example of former ages. The monuments of Grecian art and of
Roman virtue, the trophies of the Punic and Gallic wars, the most holy temples, and the most
splendid palaces, were involved in one common destruction. Of the fourteen regions or quarters
into which Rome was divided, four only subsisted entire, three were levelled with the ground,
and the remaining seven, which had experienced the fury of the flames, displayed a melancholy
prospect of ruin and desolation. The vigilance of government appears not to have neglected any
of the precautions which might alleviate the sense of so dreadful a calamity. The Imperial
gardens were thrown open to the distressed multitude, temporary buildings were erected for their
accommodation, and a plentiful supply of corn and provisions was distributed at a very moderate
price. The most generous policy seemed to have dictated the edicts which regulated the
disposition of the streets and the construction of private houses; and as it usually happens, in an
age of prosperity, the conflagration of Rome, in the course of a few years, produced a new city,
more regular and more beautiful than the former. But all the prudence and humanity affected by
Nero on this occasion were insufficient to preserve him from the popular suspicion. Every crime
might be imputed to the assassin of his wife and mother; nor could the prince who prostituted his
person and dignity on the theatre be deemed incapable of the most extravagant folly. The voice
of rumor accused the emperor as the incendiary of his own capital; and as the most incredible
stories are the best adapted to the genius of an enraged people, it was gravely reported, and
firmly believed, that Nero, enjoying the calamity which he had occasioned, amused himself with
singing to his lyre the destruction of ancient Troy. To divert a suspicion, which the power of
despotism was unable to suppress, the emperor resolved to substitute in his own place some
fictitious criminals. "With this view," continues Tacitus, "he inflicted the most exquisite tortures
on those men, who, under the vulgar appellation of Christians, were already branded with
deserved infamy. They derived their name and origin from Christ, who in the reign of Tiberius
had suffered death by the sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilate. For a while this dire
superstition was checked; but it again burst forth; * and not only spread itself over Judæa, the
first seat of this mischievous sect, but was even introduced into Rome, the common asylum
which receives and protects whatever is impure, whatever is atrocious. The confessions of those
who were seized discovered a great multitude of their accomplices, and they were all convicted,
not so much for the crime of setting fire to the city, as for their hatred of human kind. They died
in torments, and their torments were imbittered by insult and derision. Some were nailed on
crosses; others sewn up in the skins of wild beasts, and exposed to the fury of dogs; others again,
smeared over with combustible materials, were used as torches to illuminate the darkness of the
night. The gardens of Nero were destined for the melancholy spectacle, which was accompanied
with a horse-race and honored with the presence of the emperor, who mingled with the populace
in the dress and attitude of a charioteer. The guilt of the Christians deserved indeed the most
exemplary punishment, but the public abhorrence was changed into commiseration, from the
opinion that those unhappy wretches were sacrificed, not so much to the public welfare, as to the
cruelty of a jealous tyrant." Those who survey with a curious eye the revolutions of mankind,
may observe, that the gardens and circus of Nero on the Vatican, which were polluted with the
blood of the first Christians, have been rendered still more famous by the triumph and by the
abuse of the persecuted religion. On the same spot, a temple, which far surpasses the ancient
glories of the Capitol, has been since erected by the Christian Pontiffs, who, deriving their claim
of universal dominion from an humble fisherman of Galilee, have succeeded to the throne of the
Cæsars, given laws to the barbarian conquerors of Rome, and extended their spiritual
jurisdiction from the coast of the Baltic to the shores of the Pacific Ocean.
But it would be improper to dismiss this account of Nero's persecution, till we have made some
observations that may serve to remove the difficulties with which it is perplexed, and to throw
some light on the subsequent history of the church.
1. The most sceptical criticism is obliged to respect the truth of this extraordinary fact, and the
integrity of this celebrated passage of Tacitus. The former is confirmed by the diligent and
accurate Suetonius, who mentions the punishment which Nero inflicted on the Christians, a sect
of men who had embraced a new and criminal superstition. The latter may be proved by the
consent of the most ancient manuscripts; by the inimitable character of the style of Tacitus by
his reputation, which guarded his text from the interpolations of pious fraud; and by the purport
of his narration, which accused the first Christians of the most atrocious crimes, without
insinuating that they possessed any miraculous or even magical powers above the rest of
mankind. 2. Notwithstanding it is probable that Tacitus was born some years before the fire of
Rome, he could derive only from reading and conversation the knowledge of an event which
happened during his infancy. Before he gave himself to the public, he calmly waited till his
genius had attained its full maturity, and he was more than forty years of age, when a grateful
regard for the memory of the virtuous Agricola extorted from him the most early of those
historical compositions which will delight and instruct the most distant posterity. After making a
trial of his strength in the life of Agricola and the description of Germany, he conceived, and at
length executed, a more arduous work; the history of Rome, in thirty books, from the fall of
Nero to the accession of Nerva. The administration of Nerva introduced an age of justice and
propriety, which Tacitus had destined for the occupation of his old age; but when he took a
nearer view of his subject, judging, perhaps, that it was a more honorable or a less invidious
office to record the vices of past tyrants, than to celebrate the virtues of a reigning monarch, he
chose rather to relate, under the form of annals, the actions of the four immediate successors of
Augustus. To collect, to dispose, and to adorn a series of fourscore years, in an immortal work,
every sentence of which is pregnant with the deepest observations and the most lively images,
was an undertaking sufficient to exercise the genius of Tacitus himself during the greatest part of
his life. In the last years of the reign of Trajan, whilst the victorious monarch extended the power
of Rome beyond its ancient limits, the historian was describing, in the second and fourth books
of his annals, the tyranny of Tiberius; and the emperor Hadrian must have succeeded to the
throne, before Tacitus, in the regular prosecution of his work, could relate the fire of the capital,
and the cruelty of Nero towards the unfortunate Christians. At the distance of sixty years, it was
the duty of the annalist to adopt the narratives of contemporaries; but it was natural for the
philosopher to indulge himself in the description of the origin, the progress, and the character of
the new sect, not so much according to the knowledge or prejudices of the age of Nero, as
according to those of the time of Hadrian. 3 Tacitus very frequently trusts to the curiosity or
reflection of his readers to supply those intermediate circumstances and ideas, which, in his
extreme conciseness, he has thought proper to suppress. We may therefore presume to imagine
some probable cause which could direct the cruelty of Nero against the Christians of Rome,
whose obscurity, as well as innocence, should have shielded them from his indignation, and even
from his notice. The Jews, who were numerous in the capital, and oppressed in their own
country, were a much fitter object for the suspicions of the emperor and of the people: nor did it
seem unlikely that a vanquished nation, who already discovered their abhorrence of the Roman
yoke, might have recourse to the most atrocious means of gratifying their implacable revenge.
But the Jews possessed very powerful advocates in the palace, and even in the heart of the
tyrant; his wife and mistress, the beautiful Poppæa, and a favorite player of the race of Abraham,
who had already employed their intercession in behalf of the obnoxious people. In their room it
was necessary to offer some other victims, and it might easily be suggested that, although the
genuine followers of Moses were innocent of the fire of Rome, there had arisen among them a
new and pernicious sect of Galilæans, which was capable of the most horrid crimes. Under the
appellation of Galilæans, two distinctions of men were confounded, the most opposite to each
other in their manners and principles; the disciples who had embraced the faith of Jesus of
Nazareth, and the zealots who had followed the standard of Judas the Gaulonite. The former
were the friends, the latter were the enemies, of human kind; and the only resemblance between
them consisted in the same inflexible constancy, which, in the defence of their cause, rendered
them insensible of death and tortures. The followers of Judas, who impelled their countrymen
into rebellion, were soon buried under the ruins of Jerusalem; whilst those of Jesus, known by
the more celebrated name of Christians, diffused themselves over the Roman empire. How
natural was it for Tacitus, in the time of Hadrian, to appropriate to the Christians the guilt and
the sufferings, * which he might, with far greater truth and justice, have attributed to a sect
whose odious memory was almost extinguished! 4. Whatever opinion may be entertained of this
conjecture, (for it is no more than a conjecture,) it is evident that the effect, as well as the cause,
of Nero's persecution, was confined to the walls of Rome, that the religious tenets of the
Galilæans or Christians, were never made a subject of punishment, or even of inquiry; and that,
as the idea of their sufferings was for a long time connected with the idea of cruelty and
injustice, the moderation of succeeding princes inclined them to spare a sect, oppressed by a
tyrant, whose rage had been usually directed against virtue and innocence.
It is somewhat remarkable that the flames of war consumed, almost at the same time, the temple
of Jerusalem and the Capitol of Rome; and it appears no less singular, that the tribute which
devotion had destined to the former, should have been converted by the power of an assaulting
victor to restore and adorn the splendor of the latter. The emperors levied a general capitation
tax on the Jewish people; and although the sum assessed on the head of each individual was
inconsiderable, the use for which it was designed, and the severity with which it was exacted,
were considered as an intolerable grievance. Since the officers of the revenue extended their
unjust claim to many persons who were strangers to the blood or religion of the Jews, it was
impossible that the Christians, who had so often sheltered themselves under the shade of the
synagogue, should now escape this rapacious persecution. Anxious as they were to avoid the
slightest infection of idolatry, their conscience forbade them to contribute to the honor of that
dæmon who had assumed the character of the Capitoline Jupiter. As a very numerous though
declining party among the Christians still adhered to the law of Moses, their efforts to dissemble
their Jewish origin were detected by the decisive test of circumcision; nor were the Roman
magistrates at leisure to inquire into the difference of their religious tenets. Among the
Christians who were brought before the tribunal of the emperor, or, as it seems more probable,
before that of the procurator of Judæa, two persons are said to have appeared, distinguished by
their extraction, which was more truly noble than that of the greatest monarchs. These were the
grandsons of St. Jude the apostle, who himself was the brother of Jesus Christ. Their natural
pretensions to the throne of David might perhaps attract the respect of the people, and excite the
jealousy of the governor; but the meanness of their garb, and the simplicity of their answers,
soon convinced him that they were neither desirous nor capable of disturbing the peace of the
Roman empire. They frankly confessed their royal origin, and their near relation to the Messiah;
but they disclaimed any temporal views, and professed that his kingdom, which they devoutly
expected, was purely of a spiritual and angelic nature. When they were examined concerning
their fortune and occupation, they showed their hands, hardened with daily labor, and declared
that they derived their whole subsistence from the cultivation of a farm near the village of
Cocaba, of the extent of about twenty-four English acres, and of the value of nine thousand
drachms, or three hundred pounds sterling. The grandsons of St. Jude were dismissed with
compassion and contempt.
But although the obscurity of the house of David might protect them from the suspicions of a
tyrant, the present greatness of his own family alarmed the pusillanimous temper of Domitian,
which could only be appeased by the blood of those Romans whom he either feared, or hated, or
esteemed. Of the two sons of his uncle Flavius Sabinus, the elder was soon convicted of
treasonable intentions, and the younger, who bore the name of Flavius Clemens, was indebted
for his safety to his want of courage and ability. The emperor for a long time, distinguished so
harmless a kinsman by his favor and protection, bestowed on him his own niece Domitilla,
adopted the children of that marriage to the hope of the succession, and invested their father
with the honors of the consulship.
But he had scarcely finished the term of his annual magistracy, when, on a slight pretence, he
was condemned and executed; Domitilla was banished to a desolate island on the coast of
Campania; and sentences either of death or of confiscation were pronounced against a great
number of who were involved in the same accusation. The guilt imputed to their charge was that
of Atheism and Jewish manners; a singular association of ideas, which cannot with any
propriety be applied except to the Christians, as they were obscurely and imperfectly viewed by
the magistrates and by the writers of that period. On the strength of so probable an interpretation,
and too eagerly admitting the suspicions of a tyrant as an evidence of their honorable crime, the
church has placed both Clemens and Domitilla among its first martyrs, and has branded the
cruelty of Domitian with the name of the second persecution. But this persecution (if it deserves
that epithet) was of no long duration. A few months after the death of Clemens, and the
banishment of Domitilla, Stephen, a freedman belonging to the latter, who had enjoyed the
favor, but who had not surely embraced the faith, of his mistress, * assassinated the emperor in
his palace. The memory of Domitian was condemned by the senate; his acts were rescinded; his
exiles recalled; and under the gentle administration of Nerva, while the innocent were restored
to their rank and fortunes, even the most guilty either obtained pardon or escaped punishment.
II. About ten years afterwards, under the reign of Trajan, the younger Pliny was intrusted by his
friend and master with the government of Bithynia and Pontus. He soon found himself at a loss
to determine by what rule of justice or of law he should direct his conduct in the execution of an
office the most repugnant to his humanity. Pliny had never assisted at any judicial proceedings
against the Christians, with whose lame alone he seems to be acquainted; and he was totally
uninformed with regard to the nature of their guilt, the method of their conviction, and the
degree of their punishment. In this perplexity he had recourse to his usual expedient, of
submitting to the wisdom of Trajan an impartial, and, in some respects, a favorable account of
the new superstition, requesting the emperor, that he would condescend to resolve his doubts,
and to instruct his ignorance. The life of Pliny had been employed in the acquisition of learning,
and in the business of the world. Since the age of nineteen he had pleaded with distinction in the
tribunals of Rome, filled a place in the senate, had been invested with the honors of the
consulship, and had formed very numerous connections with every order of men, both in Italy
and in the provinces. From his ignorance therefore we may derive some useful information. We
may assure ourselves, that when he accepted the government of Bithynia, there were no general
laws or decrees of the senate in force against the Christians; that neither Trajan nor any of his
virtuous predecessors, whose edicts were received into the civil and criminal jurisprudence, had
publicly declared their intentions concerning the new sect; and that whatever proceedings had
been carried on against the Christians, there were none of sufficient weight and authority to
establish a precedent for the conduct of a Roman magistrate.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part III.
The answer of Trajan, to which the Christians of the succeeding age have frequently appealed,
discovers as much regard for justice and humanity as could be reconciled with his mistaken
notions of religious policy. Instead of displaying the implacable zeal of an inquisitor, anxious to
discover the most minute particles of heresy, and exulting in the number of his victims, the
emperor expresses much more solicitude to protect the security of the innocent, than to prevent
the escape of the guilty. He acknowledged the difficulty of fixing any general plan; but he lays
down two salutary rules, which often afforded relief and support to the distressed Christians.
Though he directs the magistrates to punish such persons as are legally convicted, he prohibits
them, with a very humane inconsistency, from making any inquiries concerning the supposed
criminals. Nor was the magistrate allowed to proceed on every kind of information. Anonymous
charges the emperor rejects, as too repugnant to the equity of his government; and he strictly
requires, for the conviction of those to whom the guilt of Christianity is imputed, the positive
evidence of a fair and open accuser. It is likewise probable, that the persons who assumed so
invidiuous an office, were obliged to declare the grounds of their suspicions, to specify (both in
respect to time and place) the secret assemblies, which their Christian adversary had frequented,
and to disclose a great number of circumstances, which were concealed with the most vigilant
jealousy from the eye of the profane. If they succeeded in their prosecution, they were exposed
to the resentment of a considerable and active party, to the censure of the more liberal portion of
mankind, and to the ignominy which, in every age and country, has attended the character of an
informer. If, on the contrary, they failed in their proofs, they incurred the severe and perhaps
capital penalty, which, according to a law published by the emperor Hadrian, was inflicted on
those who falsely attributed to their fellow-citizens the crime of Christianity. The violence of
personal or superstitious animosity might sometimes prevail over the most natural apprehensions
of disgrace and danger but it cannot surely be imagined, that accusations of so unpromising an
appearance were either lightly or frequently undertaken by the Pagan subjects of the Roman
empire. *
The expedient which was employed to elude the prudence of the laws, affords a sufficient proof
how effectually they disappointed the mischievous designs of private malice or superstitious
zeal. In a large and tumultuous assembly, the restraints of fear and shame, so forcible on the
minds of individuals, are deprived of the greatest part of their influence. The pious Christian, as
he was desirous to obtain, or to escape, the glory of martyrdom, expected, either with impatience
or with terror, the stated returns of the public games and festivals. On those occasions the
inhabitants of the great cities of the empire were collected in the circus or the theatre, where
every circumstance of the place, as well as of the ceremony, contributed to kindle their devotion,
and to extinguish their humanity. Whilst the numerous spectators, crowned with garlands,
perfumed with incense, purified with the blood of victims, and surrounded with the altars and
statues of their tutelar deities, resigned themselves to the enjoyment of pleasures, which they
considered as an essential part of their religious worship, they recollected, that the Christians
alone abhorred the gods of mankind, and by their absence and melancholy on these solemn
festivals, seemed to insult or to lament the public felicity. If the empire had been afflicted by any
recent calamity, by a plague, a famine, or an unsuccessful war; if the Tyber had, or if the Nile
had not, risen beyond its banks; if the earth had shaken, or if the temperate order of the seasons
had been interrupted, the superstitious Pagans were convinced that the crimes and the impiety of
the Christians, who were spared by the excessive lenity of the government, had at length
provoked the divine justice. It was not among a licentious and exasperated populace, that the
forms of legal proceedings could be observed; it was not in an amphitheatre, stained with the
blood of wild beasts and gladiators, that the voice of compassion could be heard. The impatient
clamors of the multitude denounced the Christians as the enemies of gods and men, doomed
them to the severest tortures, and venturing to accuse by name some of the most distinguished of
the new sectaries, required with irresistible vehemence that they should be instantly apprehended
and cast to the lions. The provincial governors and magistrates who presided in the public
spectacles were usually inclined to gratify the inclinations, and to appease the rage, of the
people, by the sacrifice of a few obnoxious victims. But the wisdom of the emperors protected
the church from the danger of these tumultuous clamors and irregular accusations, which they
justly censured as repugnant both to the firmness and to the equity of their administration. The
edicts of Hadrian and of Antoninus Pius expressly declared, that the voice of the multitude
should never be admitted as legal evidence to convict or to punish those unfortunate persons
who had embraced the enthusiasm of the Christians.
III. Punishment was not the inevitable consequence of conviction, and the Christians, whose
guilt was the most clearly proved by the testimony of witnesses, or even by their voluntary
confession, still retained in their own power the alternative of life or death. It was not so much
the past offence, as the actual resistance, which excited the indignation of the magistrate. He was
persuaded that he offered them an easy pardon, since, if they consented to cast a few grains of
incense upon the altar, they were dismissed from the tribunal in safety and with applause. It was
esteemed the duty of a humane judge to endeavor to reclaim, rather than to punish, those
deluded enthusiasts. Varying his tone according to the age, the sex, or the situation of the
prisoners, he frequently condescended to set before their eyes every circumstance which could
render life more pleasing, or death more terrible; and to solicit, nay, to entreat, them, that they
would show some compassion to themselves, to their families, and to their friends. If threats
and persuasions proved ineffectual, he had often recourse to violence; the scourge and the rack
were called in to supply the deficiency of argument, and every art of cruelty was employed to
subdue such inflexible, and, as it appeared to the Pagans, such criminal, obstinacy. The ancient
apologists of Christianity have censured, with equal truth and severity, the irregular conduct of
their persecutors who, contrary to every principle of judicial proceeding, admitted the use of
torture, in order to obtain, not a confession, but a denial, of the crime which was the object of
their inquiry. The monks of succeeding ages, who, in their peaceful solitudes, entertained
themselves with diversifying the deaths and sufferings of the primitive martyrs, have frequently
invented torments of a much more refined and ingenious nature. In particular, it has pleased
them to suppose, that the zeal of the Roman magistrates, disdaining every consideration of moral
virtue or public decency, endeavored to seduce those whom they were unable to vanquish, and
that by their orders the most brutal violence was offered to those whom they found it impossible
to seduce. It is related, that females, who were prepared to despise death, were sometimes
condemned to a more severe trial, and called upon to determine whether they set a higher value
on their religion or on their chastity. The youths to whose licentious embraces they were
abandoned, received a solemn exhortation from the judge, to exert their most strenuous efforts to
maintain the honor of Venus against the impious virgin who refused to burn incense on her
altars. Their violence, however, was commonly disappointed, and the seasonable interposition of
some miraculous power preserved the chaste spouses of Christ from the dishonor even of an
involuntary defeat. We should not indeed neglect to remark, that the more ancient as well as
authentic memorials of the church are seldom polluted with these extravagant and indecent
fictions.
The total disregard of truth and probability in the representation of these primitive martyrdoms
was occasioned by a very natural mistake. The ecclesiastical writers of the fourth or fifth
centuries ascribed to the magistrates of Rome the same degree of implacable and unrelenting
zeal which filled their own breasts against the heretics or the idolaters of their own times. It is
not improbable that some of those persons who were raised to the dignities of the empire, might
have imbibed the prejudices of the populace, and that the cruel disposition of others might
occasionally be stimulated by motives of avarice or of personal resentment. But it is certain, and
we may appeal to the grateful confessions of the first Christians, that the greatest part of those
magistrates who exercised in the provinces the authority of the emperor, or of the senate, and to
whose hands alone the jurisdiction of life and death was intrusted, behaved like men of polished
manners and liberal education, who respected the rules of justice, and who were conversant with
the precepts of philosophy. They frequently declined the odious task of persecution, dismissed
the charge with contempt, or suggested to the accused Christian some legal evasion, by which he
might elude the severity of the laws. Whenever they were invested with a discretionary power,
they used it much less for the oppression, than for the relief and benefit of the afflicted church.
They were far from condemning all the Christians who were accused before their tribunal, and
very far from punishing with death all those who were convicted of an obstinate adherence to the
new superstition. Contenting themselves, for the most part, with the milder chastisements of
imprisonment, exile, or slavery in the mines, they left the unhappy victims of their justice some
reason to hope, that a prosperous event, the accession, the marriage, or the triumph of an
emperor, might speedily restore them, by a general pardon, to their former state. The martyrs,
devoted to immediate execution by the Roman magistrates, appear to have been selected from
the most opposite extremes. They were either bishops and presbyters, the persons the most
distinguished among the Christians by their rank and influence, and whose example might strike
terror into the whole sect; or else they were the meanest and most abject among them,
particularly those of the servile condition, whose lives were esteemed of little value, and whose
sufferings were viewed by the ancients with too careless an indifference. The learned Origen,
who, from his experience as well as reading, was intimately acquainted with the history of the
Christians, declares, in the most express terms, that the number of martyrs was very
inconsiderable. His authority would alone be sufficient to annihilate that formidable army of
martyrs, whose relics, drawn for the most part from the catacombs of Rome, have replenished so
many churches, and whose marvellous achievements have been the subject of so many volumes
of Holy Romance. But the general assertion of Origen may be explained and confirmed by the
particular testimony of his friend Dionysius, who, in the immense city of Alexandria, and under
the rigorous persecution of Decius, reckons only ten men and seven women who suffered for the
profession of the Christian name.
During the same period of persecution, the zealous, the eloquent, the ambitious Cyprian
governed the church, not only of Carthage, but even of Africa. He possessed every quality which
could engage the reverence of the faithful, or provoke the suspicions and resentment of the
Pagan magistrates. His character as well as his station seemed to mark out that holy prelate as
the most distinguished object of envy and danger. The experience, however, of the life of
Cyprian, is sufficient to prove that our fancy has exaggerated the perilous situation of a Christian
bishop; and the dangers to which he was exposed were less imminent than those which temporal
ambition is always prepared to encounter in the pursuit of honors. Four Roman emperors, with
their families, their favorites, and their adherents, perished by the sword in the space of ten
years, during which the bishop of Carthage guided by his authority and eloquence the councils of
the African church. It was only in the third year of his administration, that he had reason, during
a few months, to apprehend the severe edicts of Decius, the vigilance of the magistrate and the
clamors of the multitude, who loudly demanded, that Cyprian, the leader of the Christians,
should be thrown to the lions. Prudence suggested the necessity of a temporary retreat, and the
voice of prudence was obeyed. He withdrew himself into an obscure solitude, from whence he
could maintain a constant correspondence with the clergy and people of Carthage; and,
concealing himself till the tempest was past, he preserved his life, without relinquishing either
his power or his reputation. His extreme caution did not, however, escape the censure of the
more rigid Christians, who lamented, or the reproaches of his personal enemies, who insulted, a
conduct which they considered as a pusillanimous and criminal desertion of the most sacred
duty. The propriety of reserving himself for the future exigencies of the church, the example of
several holy bishops, and the divine admonitions, which, as he declares himself, he frequently
received in visions and ecstacies, were the reasons alleged in his justification. But his best
apology may be found in the cheerful resolution, with which, about eight years afterwards, he
suffered death in the cause of religion. The authentic history of his martyrdom has been recorded
with unusual candor and impartiality. A short abstract, therefore, of its most important
circumstances, will convey the clearest information of the spirit, and of the forms, of the Roman
persecutions.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part IV.
When Valerian was consul for the third, and Gallienus for the fourth time, Paternus, proconsul
of Africa, summoned Cyprian to appear in his private council-chamber. He there acquainted him
with the Imperial mandate which he had just received, that those who had abandoned the
Roman religion should immediately return to the practice of the ceremonies of their ancestors.
Cyprian replied without hesitation, that he was a Christian and a bishop, devoted to the worship
of the true and only Deity, to whom he offered up his daily supplications for the safety and
prosperity of the two emperors, his lawful sovereigns. With modest confidence he pleaded the
privilege of a citizen, in refusing to give any answer to some invidious and indeed illegal
questions which the proconsul had proposed. A sentence of banishment was pronounced as the
penalty of Cyprian's disobedience; and he was conducted without delay to Curubis, a free and
maritime city of Zeugitania, in a pleasant situation, a fertile territory, and at the distance of about
forty miles from Carthage. The exiled bishop enjoyed the conveniences of life and the
consciousness of virtue. His reputation was diffused over Africa and Italy; an account of his
behavior was published for the edification of the Christian world; and his solitude was
frequently interrupted by the letters, the visits, and the congratulations of the faithful. On the
arrival of a new proconsul in the province the fortune of Cyprian appeared for some time to wear
a still more favorable aspect. He was recalled from banishment; and though not yet permitted to
return to Carthage, his own gardens in the neighborhood of the capital were assigned for the
place of his residence.
At length, exactly one year after Cyprian was first apprehended, Galerius Maximus, proconsul
of Africa, received the Imperial warrant for the execution of the Christian teachers. The bishop
of Carthage was sensible that he should be singled out for one of the first victims; and the frailty
of nature tempted him to withdraw himself, by a secret flight, from the danger and the honor of
martyrdom; * but soon recovering that fortitude which his character required, he returned to his
gardens, and patiently expected the ministers of death. Two officers of rank, who were intrusted
with that commission, placed Cyprian between them in a chariot, and as the proconsul was not
then at leisure, they conducted him, not to a prison, but to a private house in Carthage, which
belonged to one of them. An elegant supper was provided for the entertainment of the bishop,
and his Christian friends were permitted for the last time to enjoy his society, whilst the streets
were filled with a multitude of the faithful, anxious and alarmed at the approaching fate of their
spiritual father. In the morning he appeared before the tribunal of the proconsul, who, after
informing himself of the name and situation of Cyprian, commanded him to offer sacrifice, and
pressed him to reflect on the consequences of his disobedience. The refusal of Cyprian was firm
and decisive; and the magistrate, when he had taken the opinion of his council, pronounced with
some reluctance the sentence of death. It was conceived in the following terms: "That Thascius
Cyprianus should be immediately beheaded, as the enemy of the gods of Rome, and as the chief
and ringleader of a criminal association, which he had seduced into an impious resistance
against the laws of the most holy emperors, Valerian and Gallienus." The manner of his
execution was the mildest and least painful that could be inflicted on a person convicted of any
capital offence; nor was the use of torture admitted to obtain from the bishop of Carthage either
the recantation of his principles or the discovery of his accomplices.
As soon as the sentence was proclaimed, a general cry of "We will die with him," arose at once
among the listening multitude of Christians who waited before the palace gates. The generous
effusions of their zeal and their affection were neither serviceable to Cyprian nor dangerous to
themselves. He was led away under a guard of tribunes and centurions, without resistance and
without insult, to the place of his execution, a spacious and level plain near the city, which was
already filled with great numbers of spectators. His faithful presbyters and deacons were
permitted to accompany their holy bishop. * They assisted him in laying aside his upper
garment, spread linen on the ground to catch the precious relics of his blood, and received his
orders to bestow five-and-twenty pieces of gold on the executioner. The martyr then covered his
face with his hands, and at one blow his head was separated from his body. His corpse remained
during some hours exposed to the curiosity of the Gentiles: but in the night it was removed, and
transported in a triumphal procession, and with a splendid illumination, to the burial-place of the
Christians. The funeral of Cyprian was publicly celebrated without receiving any interruption
from the Roman magistrates; and those among the faithful, who had performed the last offices to
his person and his memory, were secure from the danger of inquiry or of punishment. It is
remarkable, that of so great a multitude of bishops in the province of Africa, Cyprian was the
first who was esteemed worthy to obtain the crown of martyrdom.
It was in the choice of Cyprian, either to die a martyr, or to live an apostate; but on the choice
depended the alternative of honor or infamy. Could we suppose that the bishop of Carthage had
employed the profession of the Christian faith only as the instrument of his avarice or ambition,
it was still incumbent on him to support the character he had assumed; and if he possessed the
smallest degree of manly fortitude, rather to expose himself to the most cruel tortures, than by a
single act to exchange the reputation of a whole life, for the abhorrence of his Christian brethren,
and the contempt of the Gentile world. But if the zeal of Cyprian was supported by the sincere
conviction of the truth of those doctrines which he preached, the crown of martyrdom must have
appeared to him as an object of desire rather than of terror. It is not easy to extract any distinct
ideas from the vague though eloquent declamations of the Fathers, or to ascertain the degree of
immortal glory and happiness which they confidently promised to those who were so fortunate
as to shed their blood in the cause of religion. They inculcated with becoming diligence, that the
fire of martyrdom supplied every defect and expiated every sin; that while the souls of ordinary
Christians were obliged to pass through a slow and painful purification, the triumphant sufferers
entered into the immediate fruition of eternal bliss, where, in the society of the patriarchs, the
apostles, and the prophets, they reigned with Christ, and acted as his assessors in the universal
judgment of mankind. The assurance of a lasting reputation upon earth, a motive so congenial to
the vanity of human nature, often served to animate the courage of the martyrs. The honors
which Rome or Athens bestowed on those citizens who had fallen in the cause of their country,
were cold and unmeaning demonstrations of respect, when compared with the ardent gratitude
and devotion which the primitive church expressed towards the victorious champions of the
faith. The annual commemoration of their virtues and sufferings was observed as a sacred
ceremony, and at length terminated in religious worship. Among the Christians who had publicly
confessed their religious principles, those who (as it very frequently happened) had been
dismissed from the tribunal or the prisons of the Pagan magistrates, obtained such honors as
were justly due to their imperfect martyrdom and their generous resolution. The most pious
females courted the permission of imprinting kisses on the fetters which they had worn, and on
the wounds which they had received. Their persons were esteemed holy, their decisions were
admitted with deference, and they too often abused, by their spiritual pride and licentious
manners, the preeminence which their zeal and intrepidity had acquired. Distinctions like these,
whilst they display the exalted merit, betray the inconsiderable number of those who suffered,
and of those who died, for the profession of Christianity.
The sober discretion of the present age will more readily censure than admire, but can more
easily admire than imitate, the fervor of the first Christians, who, according to the lively
expressions of Sulpicius Severus, desired martyrdom with more eagerness than his own
contemporaries solicited a bishopric. The epistles which Ignatius composed as he was carried in
chains through the cities of Asia, breathe sentiments the most repugnant to the ordinary feelings
of human nature. He earnestly beseeches the Romans, that when he should be exposed in the
amphitheatre, they would not, by their kind but unseasonable intercession, deprive him of the
crown of glory; and he declares his resolution to provoke and irritate the wild beasts which
might be employed as the instruments of his death. Some stories are related of the courage of
martyrs, who actually performed what Ignatius had intended; who exasperated the fury of the
lions, pressed the executioner to hasten his office, cheerfully leaped into the fires which were
kindled to consume them, and discovered a sensation of joy and pleasure in the midst of the
most exquisite tortures. Several examples have been preserved of a zeal impatient of those
restraints which the emperors had provided for the security of the church. The Christians
sometimes supplied by their voluntary declaration the want of an accuser, rudely disturbed the
public service of paganism, and rushing in crowds round the tribunal of the magistrates, called
upon them to pronounce and to inflict the sentence of the law. The behavior of the Christians
was too remarkable to escape the notice of the ancient philosophers; but they seem to have
considered it with much less admiration than astonishment. Incapable of conceiving the motives
which sometimes transported the fortitude of believers beyond the bounds of prudence or reason,
they treated such an eagerness to die as the strange result of obstinate despair, of stupid
insensibility, or of superstitious frenzy. "Unhappy men!" exclaimed the proconsul Antoninus to
the Christians of Asia; "unhappy men! if you are thus weary of your lives, is it so difficult for
you to find ropes and precipices?" He was extremely cautious (as it is observed by a learned and
pious historian) of punishing men who had found no accusers but themselves, the Imperial laws
not having made any provision for so unexpected a case: condemning therefore a few as a
warning to their brethren, he dismissed the multitude with indignation and contempt.
Notwithstanding this real or affected disdain, the intrepid constancy of the faithful was
productive of more salutary effects on those minds which nature or grace had disposed for the
easy reception of religious truth. On these melancholy occasions, there were many among the
Gentiles who pitied, who admired, and who were converted. The generous enthusiasm was
communicated from the sufferer to the spectators; and the blood of martyrs, according to a
well-known observation, became the seed of the church.
But although devotion had raised, and eloquence continued to inflame, this fever of the mind, it
insensibly gave way to the more natural hopes and fears of the human heart, to the love of life,
the apprehension of pain, and the horror of dissolution. The more prudent rulers of the church
found themselves obliged to restrain the indiscreet ardor of their followers, and to distrust a
constancy which too often abandoned them in the hour of trial. As the lives of the faithful
became less mortified and austere, they were every day less ambitious of the honors of
martyrdom; and the soldiers of Christ, instead of distinguishing themselves by voluntary deeds
of heroism, frequently deserted their post, and fled in confusion before the enemy whom it was
their duty to resist. There were three methods, however, of escaping the flames of persecution,
which were not attended with an equal degree of guilt: first, indeed, was generally allowed to be
innocent; the second was of a doubtful, or at least of a venial, nature; but the third implied a
direct and criminal apostasy from the Christian faith.
I. A modern inquisitor would hear with surprise, that whenever an information was given to a
Roman magistrate of any person within his jurisdiction who had embraced the sect of the
Christians, the charge was communicated to the party accused, and that a convenient time was
allowed him to settle his domestic concerns, and to prepare an answer to the crime which was
imputed to him. If he entertained any doubt of his own constancy, such a delay afforded him the
opportunity of preserving his life and honor by flight, of withdrawing himself into some obscure
retirement or some distant province, and of patiently expecting the return of peace and security.
A measure so consonant to reason was soon authorized by the advice and example of the most
holy prelates; and seems to have been censured by few except by the Montanists, who deviated
into heresy by their strict and obstinate adherence to the rigor of ancient discipline. II. The
provincial governors, whose zeal was less prevalent than their avarice, had countenanced the
practice of selling certificates, (or libels, as they were called,) which attested, that the persons
therein mentioned had complied with the laws, and sacrificed to the Roman deities. By
producing these false declarations, the opulent and timid Christians were enabled to silence the
malice of an informer, and to reconcile in some measure their safety with their religion. A slight
penance atoned for this profane dissimulation. * III. In every persecution there were great
numbers of unworthy Christians who publicly disowned or renounced the faith which they had
professed; and who confirmed the sincerity of their abjuration, by the legal acts of burning
incense or of offering sacrifices. Some of these apostates had yielded on the first menace or
exhortation of the magistrate; whilst the patience of others had been subdued by the length and
repetition of tortures. The affrighted countenances of some betrayed their inward remorse, while
others advanced with confidence and alacrity to the altars of the gods. But the disguise which
fear had imposed, subsisted no longer than the present danger. As soon as the severity of the
persecution was abated, the doors of the churches were assailed by the returning multitude of
penitents who detested their idolatrous submission, and who solicited with equal ardor, but with
various success, their readmission into the society of Christians.
IV. Notwithstanding the general rules established for the conviction and punishment of the
Christians, the fate of those sectaries, in an extensive and arbitrary government, must still in a
great measure, have depended on their own behavior, the circumstances of the times, and the
temper of their supreme as well as subordinate rulers. Zeal might sometimes provoke, and
prudence might sometimes avert or assuage, the superstitious fury of the Pagans. A variety of
motives might dispose the provincial governors either to enforce or to relax the execution of the
laws; and of these motives the most forcible was their regard not only for the public edicts, but
for the secret intentions of the emperor, a glance from whose eye was sufficient to kindle or to
extinguish the flames of persecution. As often as any occasional severities were exercised in the
different parts of the empire, the primitive Christians lamented and perhaps magnified their own
sufferings; but the celebrated number of ten persecutions has been determined by the
ecclesiastical writers of the fifth century, who possessed a more distinct view of the prosperous
or adverse fortunes of the church, from the age of Nero to that of Diocletian. The ingenious
parallels of the ten plagues of Egypt, and of the ten horns of the Apocalypse, first suggested this
calculation to their minds; and in their application of the faith of prophecy to the truth of history,
they were careful to select those reigns which were indeed the most hostile to the Christian
cause. But these transient persecutions served only to revive the zeal and to restore the
discipline of the faithful; and the moments of extraordinary rigor were compensated by much
longer intervals of peace and security. The indifference of some princes, and the indulgence of
others, permitted the Christians to enjoy, though not perhaps a legal, yet an actual and public,
toleration of their religion.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part V.
The apology of Tertullian contains two very ancient, very singular, but at the same time very
suspicious, instances of Imperial clemency; the edicts published by Tiberius, and by Marcus
Antoninus, and designed not only to protect the innocence of the Christians, but even to
proclaim those stupendous miracles which had attested the truth of their doctrine. The first of
these examples is attended with some difficulties which might perplex a sceptical mind. We are
required to believe, that Pontius Pilate informed the emperor of the unjust sentence of death
which he had pronounced against an innocent, and, as it appeared, a divine, person; and that,
without acquiring the merit, he exposed himself to the danger of martyrdom; that Tiberius, who
avowed his contempt for all religion, immediately conceived the design of placing the Jewish
Messiah among the gods of Rome; that his servile senate ventured to disobey the commands of
their master; that Tiberius, instead of resenting their refusal, contented himself with protecting
the Christians from the severity of the laws, many years before such laws were enacted, or
before the church had assumed any distinct name or existence; and lastly, that the memory of
this extraordinary transaction was preserved in the most public and authentic records, which
escaped the knowledge of the historians of Greece and Rome, and were only visible to the eyes
of an African Christian, who composed his apology one hundred and sixty years after the death
of Tiberius. The edict of Marcus Antoninus is supposed to have been the effect of his devotion
and gratitude for the miraculous deliverance which he had obtained in the Marcomannic war.
The distress of the legions, the seasonable tempest of rain and hail, of thunder and of lightning,
and the dismay and defeat of the barbarians, have been celebrated by the eloquence of several
Pagan writers. If there were any Christians in that army, it was natural that they should ascribe
some merit to the fervent prayers, which, in the moment of danger, they had offered up for their
own and the public safety. But we are still assured by monuments of brass and marble, by the
Imperial medals, and by the Antonine column, that neither the prince nor the people entertained
any sense of this signal obligation, since they unanimously attribute their deliverance to the
providence of Jupiter, and to the interposition of Mercury. During the whole course of his reign,
Marcus despised the Christians as a philosopher, and punished them as a sovereign. *
By a singular fatality, the hardships which they had endured under the government of a virtuous
prince, immediately ceased on the accession of a tyrant; and as none except themselves had
experienced the injustice of Marcus, so they alone were protected by the lenity of Commodus.
The celebrated Marcia, the most favored of his concubines, and who at length contrived the
murder of her Imperial lover, entertained a singular affection for the oppressed church; and
though it was impossible that she could reconcile the practice of vice with the precepts of the
gospel, she might hope to atone for the frailties of her sex and profession by declaring herself the
patroness of the Christians. Under the gracious protection of Marcia, they passed in safety the
thirteen years of a cruel tyranny; and when the empire was established in the house of Severus,
they formed a domestic but more honorable connection with the new court. The emperor was
persuaded, that in a dangerous sickness, he had derived some benefit, either spiritual or physical,
from the holy oil, with which one of his slaves had anointed him. He always treated with
peculiar distinction several persons of both sexes who had embraced the new religion. The nurse
as well as the preceptor of Caracalla were Christians; * and if that young prince ever betrayed a
sentiment of humanity, it was occasioned by an incident, which, however trifling, bore some
relation to the cause of Christianity. Under the reign of Severus, the fury of the populace was
checked; the rigor of ancient laws was for some time suspended; and the provincial governors
were satisfied with receiving an annual present from the churches within their jurisdiction, as the
price, or as the reward, of their moderation. The controversy concerning the precise time of the
celebration of Easter, armed the bishops of Asia and Italy against each other, and was considered
as the most important business of this period of leisure and tranquillity. Nor was the peace of
the church interrupted, till the increasing numbers of proselytes seem at length to have attracted
the attention, and to have alienated the mind of Severus. With the design of restraining the
progress of Christianity, he published an edict, which, though it was designed to affect only the
new converts, could not be carried into strict execution, without exposing to danger and
punishment the most zealous of their teachers and missionaries. In this mitigated persecution we
may still discover the indulgent spirit of Rome and of Polytheism, which so readily admitted
every excuse in favor of those who practised the religious ceremonies of their fathers.
But the laws which Severus had enacted soon expired with the authority of that emperor; and the
Christians, after this accidental tempest, enjoyed a calm of thirty-eight years. Till this period
they had usually held their assemblies in private houses and sequestered places. They were now
permitted to erect and consecrate convenient edifices for the purpose of religious worship; to
purchase lands, even at Rome itself, for the use of the community; and to conduct the elections
of their ecclesiastical ministers in so public, but at the same time in so exemplary a manner, as
to deserve the respectful attention of the Gentiles. This long repose of the church was
accompanied with dignity. The reigns of those princes who derived their extraction from the
Asiatic provinces, proved the most favorable to the Christians; the eminent persons of the sect,
instead of being reduced to implore the protection of a slave or concubine, were admitted into
the palace in the honorable characters of priests and philosophers; and their mysterious
doctrines, which were already diffused among the people, insensibly attracted the curiosity of
their sovereign. When the empress Mammæa passed through Antioch, she expressed a desire of
conversing with the celebrated Origen, the fame of whose piety and learning was spread over the
East. Origen obeyed so flattering an invitation, and though he could not expect to succeed in the
conversion of an artful and ambitious woman, she listened with pleasure to his eloquent
exhortations, and honorably dismissed him to his retirement in Palestine. The sentiments of
Mammæa were adopted by her son Alexander, and the philosophic devotion of that emperor was
marked by a singular but injudicious regard for the Christian religion. In his domestic chapel he
placed the statues of Abraham, of Orpheus, of Apollonius, and of Christ, as an honor justly due
to those respectable sages who had instructed mankind in the various modes of addressing their
homage to the supreme and universal Deity. A purer faith, as well as worship, was openly
professed and practised among his household. Bishops, perhaps for the first time, were seen at
court; and, after the death of Alexander, when the inhuman Maximin discharged his fury on the
favorites and servants of his unfortunate benefactor, a great number of Christians of every rank
and of both sexes, were involved the promiscuous massacre, which, on their account, has
improperly received the name of Persecution. *
Notwithstanding the cruel disposition of Maximin, the effects of his resentment against the
Christians were of a very local and temporary nature, and the pious Origen, who had been
proscribed as a devoted victim, was still reserved to convey the truths of the gospel to the ear of
monarchs. He addressed several edifying letters to the emperor Philip, to his wife, and to his
mother; and as soon as that prince, who was born in the neighborhood of Palestine, had usurped
the Imperial sceptre, the Christians acquired a friend and a protector. The public and even partial
favor of Philip towards the sectaries of the new religion, and his constant reverence for the
ministers of the church, gave some color to the suspicion, which prevailed in his own times, that
the emperor himself was become a convert to the faith; and afforded some grounds for a fable
which was afterwards invented, that he had been purified by confession and penance from the
guilt contracted by the murder of his innocent predecessor. the fall of Philip introduced, with
the change of masters, a new system of government, so oppressive to the Christians, that their
former condition, ever since the time of Domitian, was represented as a state of perfect freedom
and security, if compared with the rigorous treatment which they experienced under the short
reign of Decius. The virtues of that prince will scarcely allow us to suspect that he was actuated
by a mean resentment against the favorites of his predecessor; and it is more reasonable to
believe, that in the prosecution of his general design to restore the purity of Roman manners, he
was desirous of delivering the empire from what he condemned as a recent and criminal
superstition. The bishops of the most considerable cities were removed by exile or death: the
vigilance of the magistrates prevented the clergy of Rome during sixteen months from
proceeding to a new election; and it was the opinion of the Christians, that the emperor would
more patiently endure a competitor for the purple, than a bishop in the capital. Were it possible
to suppose that the penetration of Decius had discovered pride under the disguise of humility, or
that he could foresee the temporal dominion which might insensibly arise from the claims of
spiritual authority, we might be less surprised, that he should consider the successors of St.
Peter, as the most formidable rivals to those of Augustus.
The administration of Valerian was distinguished by a levity and inconstancy ill suited to the
gravity of the Roman Censor. In the first part of his reign, he surpassed in clemency those
princes who had been suspected of an attachment to the Christian faith. In the last three years
and a half, listening to the insinuations of a minister addicted to the superstitions of Egypt, he
adopted the maxims, and imitated the severity, of his predecessor Decius. The accession of
Gallienus, which increased the calamities of the empire, restored peace to the church; and the
Christians obtained the free exercise of their religion by an edict addressed to the bishops, and
conceived in such terms as seemed to acknowledge their office and public character. The
ancient laws, without being formally repealed, were suffered to sink into oblivion; and
(excepting only some hostile intentions which are attributed to the emperor Aurelian ) the
disciples of Christ passed above forty years in a state of prosperity, far more dangerous to their
virtue than the severest trials of persecution.
The story of Paul of Samosata, who filled the metropolitan see of Antioch, while the East was in
the hands of Odenathus and Zenobia, may serve to illustrate the condition and character of the
times. The wealth of that prelate was a sufficient evidence of his guilt, since it was neither
derived from the inheritance of his fathers, nor acquired by the arts of honest industry. But Paul
considered the service of the church as a very lucrative profession. His ecclesiastical
jurisdiction was venal and rapacious; he extorted frequent contributions from the most opulent
of the faithful, and converted to his own use a considerable part of the public revenue. By his
pride and luxury, the Christian religion was rendered odious in the eyes of the Gentiles. His
council chamber and his throne, the splendor with which he appeared in public, the suppliant
crowd who solicited his attention, the multitude of letters and petitions to which he dictated his
answers, and the perpetual hurry of business in which he was involved, were circumstances
much better suited to the state of a civil magistrate, than to the humility of a primitive bishop.
When he harangued his people from the pulpit, Paul affected the figurative style and the
theatrical gestures of an Asiatic sophist, while the cathedral resounded with the loudest and most
extravagant acclamations in the praise of his divine eloquence. Against those who resisted his
power, or refused to flatter his vanity, the prelate of Antioch was arrogant, rigid, and inexorable;
but he relaxed the discipline, and lavished the treasures of the church on his dependent clergy,
who were permitted to imitate their master in the gratification of every sensual appetite. For Paul
indulged himself very freely in the pleasures of the table, and he had received into the episcopal
palace two young and beautiful women as the constant companions of his leisure moments.
Notwithstanding these scandalous vices, if Paul of Samosata had preserved the purity of the
orthodox faith, his reign over the capital of Syria would have ended only with his life; and had a
seasonable persecution intervened, an effort of courage might perhaps have placed him in the
rank of saints and martyrs. * Some nice and subtle errors, which he imprudently adopted and
obstinately maintained, concerning the doctrine of the Trinity, excited the zeal and indignation
of the Eastern churches. From Egypt to the Euxine Sea, the bishops were in arms and in motion.
Several councils were held, confutations were published, excommunications were pronounced,
ambiguous explanations were by turns accepted and refused, treaties were concluded and
violated, and at length Paul of Samosata was degraded from his episcopal character, by the
sentence of seventy or eighty bishops, who assembled for that purpose at Antioch, and who,
without consulting the rights of the clergy or people, appointed a successor by their own
authority. The manifest irregularity of this proceeding increased the numbers of the discontented
faction; and as Paul, who was no stranger to the arts of courts, had insinuated himself into the
favor of Zenobia, he maintained above four years the possession of the episcopal house and
office. * The victory of Aurelian changed the face of the East, and the two contending parties,
who applied to each other the epithets of schism and heresy, were either commanded or
permitted to plead their cause before the tribunal of the conqueror. This public and very singular
trial affords a convincing proof that the existence, the property, the privileges, and the internal
policy of the Christians, were acknowledged, if not by the laws, at least by the magistrates, of the
empire. As a Pagan and as a soldier, it could scarcely be expected that Aurelian should enter into
the discussion, whether the sentiments of Paul or those of his adversaries were most agreeable to
the true standard of the orthodox faith. His determination, however, was founded on the general
principles of equity and reason. He considered the bishops of Italy as the most impartial and
respectable judges among the Christians, and as soon as he was informed that they had
unanimously approved the sentence of the council, he acquiesced in their opinion, and
immediately gave orders that Paul should be compelled to relinquish the temporal possessions
belonging to an office, of which, in the judgment of his brethren, he had been regularly deprived.
But while we applaud the justice, we should not overlook the policy, of Aurelian, who was
desirous of restoring and cementing the dependence of the provinces on the capital, by every
means which could bind the interest or prejudices of any part of his subjects.
Amidst the frequent revolutions of the empire, the Christians still flourished in peace and
prosperity; and notwithstanding a celebrated æra of martyrs has been deduced from the
accession of Diocletian, the new system of policy, introduced and maintained by the wisdom of
that prince, continued, during more than eighteen years, to breathe the mildest and most liberal
spirit of religious toleration. The mind of Diocletian himself was less adapted indeed to
speculative inquiries, than to the active labors of war and government. His prudence rendered
him averse to any great innovation, and though his temper was not very susceptible of zeal or
enthusiasm, he always maintained an habitual regard for the ancient deities of the empire. But
the leisure of the two empresses, of his wife Prisca, and of Valeria, his daughter, permitted them
to listen with more attention and respect to the truths of Christianity, which in every age has
acknowledged its important obligations to female devotion. The principal eunuchs, Lucian and
Dorotheus, Gorgonius and Andrew, who attended the person, possessed the favor, and governed
the household of Diocletian, protected by their powerful influence the faith which they had
embraced. Their example was imitated by many of the most considerable officers of the palace,
who, in their respective stations, had the care of the Imperial ornaments, of the robes, of the
furniture, of the jewels, and even of the private treasury; and, though it might sometimes be
incumbent on them to accompany the emperor when he sacrificed in the temple, they enjoyed,
with their wives, their children, and their slaves, the free exercise of the Christian religion.
Diocletian and his colleagues frequently conferred the most important offices on those persons
who avowed their abhorrence for the worship of the gods, but who had displayed abilities proper
for the service of the state. The bishops held an honorable rank in their respective provinces, and
were treated with distinction and respect, not only by the people, but by the magistrates
themselves. Almost in every city, the ancient churches were found insufficient to contain the
increasing multitude of proselytes; and in their place more stately and capacious edifices were
erected for the public worship of the faithful. The corruption of manners and principles, so
forcibly lamented by Eusebius, may be considered, not only as a consequence, but as a proof, of
the liberty which the Christians enjoyed and abused under the reign of Diocletian. Prosperity had
relaxed the nerves of discipline. Fraud, envy, and malice prevailed in every congregation. The
presbyters aspired to the episcopal office, which every day became an object more worthy of
their ambition. The bishops, who contended with each other for ecclesiastical preeminence,
appeared by their conduct to claim a secular and tyrannical power in the church; and the lively
faith which still distinguished the Christians from the Gentiles, was shown much less in their
lives, than in their controversial writings.
Notwithstanding this seeming security, an attentive observer might discern some symptoms that
threatened the church with a more violent persecution than any which she had yet endured. The
zeal and rapid progress of the Christians awakened the Polytheists from their supine indifference
in the cause of those deities, whom custom and education had taught them to revere. The mutual
provocations of a religious war, which had already continued above two hundred years,
exasperated the animosity of the contending parties. The Pagans were incensed at the rashness of
a recent and obscure sect, which presumed to accuse their countrymen of error, and to devote
their ancestors to eternal misery. The habits of justifying the popular mythology against the
invectives of an implacable enemy, produced in their minds some sentiments of faith and
reverence for a system which they had been accustomed to consider with the most careless
levity. The supernatural powers assumed by the church inspired at the same time terror and
emulation. The followers of the established religion intrenched themselves behind a similar
fortification of prodigies; invented new modes of sacrifice, of expiation, and of initiation;
attempted to revive the credit of their expiring oracles; and listened with eager credulity to
every impostor, who flattered their prejudices by a tale of wonders. Both parties seemed to
acknowledge the truth of those miracles which were claimed by their adversaries; and while they
were contented with ascribing them to the arts of magic, and to the power of dæmons, they
mutually concurred in restoring and establishing the reign of superstition. Philosophy, her most
dangerous enemy, was now converted into her most useful ally. The groves of the academy, the
gardens of Epicurus, and even the portico of the Stoics, were almost deserted, as so many
different schools of scepticism or impiety; and many among the Romans were desirous that the
writings of Cicero should be condemned and suppressed by the authority of the senate. The
prevailing sect of the new Platonicians judged it prudent to connect themselves with the priests,
whom perhaps they despised, against the Christians, whom they had reason to fear. These
fashionable Philosophers prosecuted the design of extracting allegorical wisdom from the
fictions of the Greek poets; instituted mysterious rites of devotion for the use of their chosen
disciples; recommended the worship of the ancient gods as the emblems or ministers of the
Supreme Deity, and composed against the faith of the gospel many elaborate treatises, which
have since been committed to the flames by the prudence of orthodox emperors.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part VI.
Although the policy of Diocletian and the humanity of Constantius inclined them to preserve
inviolate the maxims of toleration, it was soon discovered that their two associates, Maximian
and Galerius, entertained the most implacable aversion for the name and religion of the
Christians. The minds of those princes had never been enlightened by science; education had
never softened their temper. They owed their greatness to their swords, and in their most
elevated fortune they still retained their superstitious prejudices of soldiers and peasants. In the
general administration of the provinces they obeyed the laws which their benefactor had
established; but they frequently found occasions of exercising within their camp and palaces a
secret persecution, for which the imprudent zeal of the Christians sometimes offered the most
specious pretences. A sentence of death was executed upon Maximilianus, an African youth,
who had been produced by his own father *before the magistrate as a sufficient and legal recruit,
but who obstinately persisted in declaring, that his conscience would not permit him to embrace
the profession of a soldier. It could scarcely be expected that any government should suffer the
action of Marcellus the Centurion to pass with impunity. On the day of a public festival, that
officer threw away his belt, his arms, and the ensigns of his office, and exclaimed with a loud
voice, that he would obey none but Jesus Christ the eternal King, and that he renounced forever
the use of carnal weapons, and the service of an idolatrous master. The soldiers, as soon as they
recovered from their astonishment, secured the person of Marcellus. He was examined in the
city of Tingi by the president of that part of Mauritania; and as he was convicted by his own
confession, he was condemned and beheaded for the crime of desertion. Examples of such a
nature savor much less of religious persecution than of martial or even civil law; but they served
to alienate the mind of the emperors, to justify the severity of Galerius, who dismissed a great
number of Christian officers from their employments; and to authorize the opinion, that a sect of
enthusiastics, which avowed principles so repugnant to the public safety, must either remain
useless, or would soon become dangerous, subjects of the empire.
After the success of the Persian war had raised the hopes and the reputation of Galerius, he
passed a winter with Diocletian in the palace of Nicomedia; and the fate of Christianity became
the object of their secret consultations. The experienced emperor was still inclined to pursue
measures of lenity; and though he readily consented to exclude the Christians from holding any
employments in the household or the army, he urged in the strongest terms the danger as well as
cruelty of shedding the blood of those deluded fanatics. Galerius at length extorted from him the
permission of summoning a council, composed of a few persons the most distinguished in the
civil and military departments of the state. The important question was agitated in their
presence, and those ambitious courtiers easily discerned, that it was incumbent on them to
second, by their eloquence, the importunate violence of the Cæsar. It may be presumed, that they
insisted on every topic which might interest the pride, the piety, or the fears, of their sovereign in
the destruction of Christianity. Perhaps they represented, that the glorious work of the
deliverance of the empire was left imperfect, as long as an independent people was permitted to
subsist and multiply in the heart of the provinces. The Christians, (it might specially be alleged,)
renouncing the gods and the institutions of Rome, had constituted a distinct republic, which
might yet be suppressed before it had acquired any military force; but which was already
governed by its own laws and magistrates, was possessed of a public treasure, and was
intimately connected in all its parts by the frequent assemblies of the bishops, to whose decrees
their numerous and opulent congregations yielded an implicit obedience. Arguments like these
may seem to have determined the reluctant mind of Diocletian to embrace a new system of
persecution; but though we may suspect, it is not in our power to relate, the secret intrigues of
the palace, the private views and resentments, the jealousy of women or eunuchs, and all those
trifling but decisive causes which so often influence the fate of empires, and the councils of the
wisest monarchs.
The pleasure of the emperors was at length signified to the Christians, who, during the course of
this melancholy winter, had expected, with anxiety, the result of so many secret consultations.
The twenty-third of February, which coincided with the Roman festival of the Terminalia, was
appointed (whether from accident or design) to set bounds to the progress of Christianity. At the
earliest dawn of day, the Prætorian præfect, accompanied by several generals, tribunes, and
officers of the revenue, repaired to the principal church of Nicomedia, which was situated on an
eminence in the most populous and beautiful part of the city. The doors were instantly broke
open; they rushed into the sanctuary; and as they searched in vain for some visible object of
worship, they were obliged to content themselves with committing to the flames the volumes of
the holy Scripture. The ministers of Diocletian were followed by a numerous body of guards and
pioneers, who marched in order of battle, and were provided with all the instruments used in the
destruction of fortified cities. By their incessant labor, a sacred edifice, which towered above the
Imperial palace, and had long excited the indignation and envy of the Gentiles, was in a few
hours levelled with the ground.
The next day the general edict of persecution was published; and though Diocletian, still averse
to the effusion of blood, had moderated the fury of Galerius, who proposed, that every one
refusing to offer sacrifice should immediately be burnt alive, the penalties inflicted on the
obstinacy of the Christians might be deemed sufficiently rigorous and effectual. It was enacted,
that their churches, in all the provinces of the empire, should be demolished to their foundations;
and the punishment of death was denounced against all who should presume to hold any secret
assemblies for the purpose of religious worship. The philosophers, who now assumed the
unworthy office of directing the blind zeal of persecution, had diligently studied the nature and
genius of the Christian religion; and as they were not ignorant that the speculative doctrines of
the faith were supposed to be contained in the writings of the prophets, of the evangelists, and of
the apostles, they most probably suggested the order, that the bishops and presbyters should
deliver all their sacred books into the hands of the magistrates; who were commanded, under the
severest penalties, to burn them in a public and solemn manner. By the same edict, the property
of the church was at once confiscated; and the several parts of which it might consist were either
sold to the highest bidder, united to the Imperial domain, bestowed on the cities and
corporations, or granted to the solicitations of rapacious courtiers. After taking such effectual
measures to abolish the worship, and to dissolve the government of the Christians, it was thought
necessary to subject to the most intolerable hardships the condition of those perverse individuals
who should still reject the religion of nature, of Rome, and of their ancestors. Persons of a liberal
birth were declared incapable of holding any honors or employments; slaves were forever
deprived of the hopes of freedom, and the whole body of the people were put out of the
protection of the law. The judges were authorized to hear and to determine every action that was
brought against a Christian. But the Christians were not permitted to complain of any injury
which they themselves had suffered; and thus those unfortunate sectaries were exposed to the
severity, while they were excluded from the benefits, of public justice. This new species of
martyrdom, so painful and lingering, so obscure and ignominious, was, perhaps, the most proper
to weary the constancy of the faithful: nor can it be doubted that the passions and interest of
mankind were disposed on this occasion to second the designs of the emperors. But the policy of
a well-ordered government must sometimes have interposed in behalf of the oppressed
Christians; * nor was it possible for the Roman princes entirely to remove the apprehension of
punishment, or to connive at every act of fraud and violence, without exposing their own
authority and the rest of their subjects to the most alarming dangers.
This edict was scarcely exhibited to the public view, in the most conspicuous place of
Nicomedia, before it was torn down by the hands of a Christian, who expressed at the same time,
by the bitterest invectives, his contempt as well as abhorrence for such impious and tyrannical
governors. His offence, according to the mildest laws, amounted to treason, and deserved death.
And if it be true that he was a person of rank and education, those circumstances could serve
only to aggravate his guilt. He was burnt, or rather roasted, by a slow fire; and his executioners,
zealous to revenge the personal insult which had been offered to the emperors, exhausted every
refinement of cruelty, without being able to subdue his patience, or to alter the steady and
insulting smile which in his dying agonies he still preserved in his countenance. The Christians,
though they confessed that his conduct had not been strictly conformable to the laws of
prudence, admired the divine fervor of his zeal; and the excessive commendations which they
lavished on the memory of their hero and martyr, contributed to fix a deep impression of terror
and hatred in the mind of Diocletian.
His fears were soon alarmed by the view of a danger from which he very narrowly escaped.
Within fifteen days the palace of Nicomedia, and even the bed-chamber of Diocletian, were
twice in flames; and though both times they were extinguished without any material damage, the
singular repetition of the fire was justly considered as an evident proof that it had not been the
effect of chance or negligence. The suspicion naturally fell on the Christians; and it was
suggested, with some degree of probability, that those desperate fanatics, provoked by their
present sufferings, and apprehensive of impending calamities, had entered into a conspiracy with
their faithful brethren, the eunuchs of the palace, against the lives of two emperors, whom they
detested as the irreconcilable enemies of the church of God. Jealousy and resentment prevailed
in every breast, but especially in that of Diocletian. A great number of persons, distinguished
either by the offices which they had filled, or by the favor which they had enjoyed, were thrown
into prison. Every mode of torture was put in practice, and the court, as well as city, was
polluted with many bloody executions. But as it was found impossible to extort any discovery of
this mysterious transaction, it seems incumbent on us either to presume the innocence, or to
admire the resolution, of the sufferers. A few days afterwards Galerius hastily withdrew himself
from Nicomedia, declaring, that if he delayed his departure from that devoted palace, he should
fall a sacrifice to the rage of the Christians. The ecclesiastical historians, from whom alone we
derive a partial and imperfect knowledge of this persecution, are at a loss how to account for the
fears and dangers of the emperors. Two of these writers, a prince and a rhetorician, were
eye-witnesses of the fire of Nicomedia. The one ascribes it to lightning, and the divine wrath; the
other affirms, that it was kindled by the malice of Galerius himself.
As the edict against the Christians was designed for a general law of the whole empire, and as
Diocletian and Galerius, though they might not wait for the consent, were assured of the
concurrence, of the Western princes, it would appear more consonant to our ideas of policy, that
the governors of all the provinces should have received secret instructions to publish, on one and
the same day, this declaration of war within their respective departments. It was at least to be
expected, that the convenience of the public highways and established posts would have enabled
the emperors to transmit their orders with the utmost despatch from the palace of Nicomedia to
the extremities of the Roman world; and that they would not have suffered fifty days to elapse,
before the edict was published in Syria, and near four months before it was signified to the cities
of Africa. This delay may perhaps be imputed to the cautious temper of Diocletian, who had
yielded a reluctant consent to the measures of persecution, and who was desirous of trying the
experiment under his more immediate eye, before he gave way to the disorders and discontent
which it must inevitably occasion in the distant provinces. At first, indeed, the magistrates were
restrained from the effusion of blood; but the use of every other severity was permitted, and even
recommended to their zeal; nor could the Christians, though they cheerfully resigned the
ornaments of their churches, resolve to interrupt their religious assemblies, or to deliver their
sacred books to the flames. The pious obstinacy of Felix, an African bishop, appears to have
embarrassed the subordinate ministers of the government. The curator of his city sent him in
chains to the proconsul. The proconsul transmitted him to the Prætorian præfect of Italy; and
Felix, who disdained even to give an evasive answer, was at length beheaded at Venusia, in
Lucania, a place on which the birth of Horace has conferred fame. This precedent, and perhaps
some Imperial rescript, which was issued in consequence of it, appeared to authorize the
governors of provinces, in punishing with death the refusal of the Christians to deliver up their
sacred books. There were undoubtedly many persons who embraced this opportunity of
obtaining the crown of martyrdom; but there were likewise too many who purchased an
ignominious life, by discovering and betraying the holy Scripture into the hands of infidels. A
great number even of bishops and presbyters acquired, by this criminal compliance, the
opprobrious epithet of Traditors; and their offence was productive of much present scandal and
of much future discord in the African church.
The copies as well as the versions of Scripture, were already so multiplied in the empire, that the
most severe inquisition could no longer be attended with any fatal consequences; and even the
sacrifice of those volumes, which, in every congregation, were preserved for public use, required
the consent of some treacherous and unworthy Christians. But the ruin of the churches was
easily effected by the authority of the government, and by the labor of the Pagans. In some
provinces, however, the magistrates contented themselves with shutting up the places of
religious worship. In others, they more literally complied with the terms of the edict; and after
taking away the doors, the benches, and the pulpit, which they burnt as it were in a funeral pile,
they completely demolished the remainder of the edifice. It is perhaps to this melancholy
occasion that we should apply a very remarkable story, which is related with so many
circumstances of variety and improbability, that it serves rather to excite than to satisfy our
curiosity. In a small town in Phrygia, of whose names as well as situation we are left ignorant, it
should seem that the magistrates and the body of the people had embraced the Christian faith;
and as some resistance might be apprehended to the execution of the edict, the governor of the
province was supported by a numerous detachment of legionaries. On their approach the citizens
threw themselves into the church, with the resolution either of defending by arms that sacred
edifice, or of perishing in its ruins. They indignantly rejected the notice and permission which
was given them to retire, till the soldiers, provoked by their obstinate refusal, set fire to the
building on all sides, and consumed, by this extraordinary kind of martyrdom, a great number of
Phrygians, with their wives and children.
Some slight disturbances, though they were suppressed almost as soon as excited, in Syria and
the frontiers of Armenia, afforded the enemies of the church a very plausible occasion to
insinuate, that those troubles had been secretly fomented by the intrigues of the bishops, who
had already forgotten their ostentatious professions of passive and unlimited obedience. The
resentment, or the fears, of Diocletian, at length transported him beyond the bounds of
moderation, which he had hitherto preserved, and he declared, in a series of cruel edicts, his
intention of abolishing the Christian name. By the first of these edicts, the governors of the
provinces were directed to apprehend all persons of the ecclesiastical order; and the prisons,
destined for the vilest criminals, were soon filled with a multitude of bishops, presbyters,
deacons, readers, and exorcists. By a second edict, the magistrates were commanded to employ
every method of severity, which might reclaim them from their odious superstition, and oblige
them to return to the established worship of the gods. This rigorous order was extended, by a
subsequent edict, to the whole body of Christians, who were exposed to a violent and general
persecution. Instead of those salutary restraints, which had required the direct and solemn
testimony of an accuser, it became the duty as well as the interest of the Imperial officers to
discover, to pursue, and to torment the most obnoxious among the faithful. Heavy penalties were
denounced against all who should presume to save a prescribed sectary from the just indignation
of the gods, and of the emperors. Yet, notwithstanding the severity of this law, the virtuous
courage of many of the Pagans, in concealing their friends or relations, affords an honorable
proof, that the rage of superstition had not extinguished in their minds the sentiments of nature
and humanity.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part VII.
Diocletian had no sooner published his edicts against the Christians, than, as if he had been
desirous of committing to other hands the work of persecution, he divested himself of the
Imperial purple. The character and situation of his colleagues and successors sometimes urged
them to enforce and sometimes inclined them to suspend, the execution of these rigorous laws;
nor can we acquire a just and distinct idea of this important period of ecclesiastical history,
unless we separately consider the state of Christianity, in the different parts of the empire, during
the space of ten years, which elapsed between the first edicts of Diocletian and the final peace of
the church.
The mild and humane temper of Constantius was averse to the oppression of any part of his
subjects. The principal offices of his palace were exercised by Christians. He loved their
persons, esteemed their fidelity, and entertained not any dislike to their religious principles. But
as long as Constantius remained in the subordinate station of Cæsar, it was not in his power
openly to reject the edicts of Diocletian, or to disobey the commands of Maximian. His authority
contributed, however, to alleviate the sufferings which he pitied and abhorred. He consented
with reluctance to the ruin of the churches; but he ventured to protect the Christians themselves
from the fury of the populace, and from the rigor of the laws. The provinces of Gaul (under
which we may probably include those of Britain) were indebted for the singular tranquillity
which they enjoyed, to the gentle interposition of their sovereign. But Datianus, the president or
governor of Spain, actuated either by zeal or policy, chose rather to execute the public edicts of
the emperors, than to understand the secret intentions of Constantius; and it can scarcely be
doubted, that his provincial administration was stained with the blood of a few martyrs. The
elevation of Constantius to the supreme and independent dignity of Augustus, gave a free scope
to the exercise of his virtues, and the shortness of his reign did not prevent him from establishing
a system of toleration, of which he left the precept and the example to his son Constantine. His
fortunate son, from the first moment of his accession, declaring himself the protector of the
church, at length deserved the appellation of the first emperor who publicly professed and
established the Christian religion. The motives of his conversion, as they may variously be
deduced from benevolence, from policy, from conviction, or from remorse, and the progress of
the revolution, which, under his powerful influence and that of his sons, rendered Christianity
the reigning religion of the Roman empire, will form a very interesting and important chapter in
the present volume of this history. At present it may be sufficient to observe, that every victory
of Constantine was productive of some relief or benefit to the church.
The provinces of Italy and Africa experienced a short but violent persecution. The rigorous
edicts of Diocletian were strictly and cheerfully executed by his associate Maximian, who had
long hated the Christians, and who delighted in acts of blood and violence. In the autumn of the
first year of the persecution, the two emperors met at Rome to celebrate their triumph; several
oppressive laws appear to have issued from their secret consultations, and the diligence of the
magistrates was animated by the presence of their sovereigns., After Diocletian had divested
himself of the purple, Italy and Africa were administered under the name of Severus, and were
exposed, without defence, to the implacable resentment of his master Galerius. Among the
martyrs of Rome, Adauctus deserves the notice of posterity. He was of a noble family in Italy,
and had raised himself, through the successive honors of the palace, to the important office of
treasurer of the private Jemesnes. Adauctus is the more remarkable for being the only person of
rank and distinction who appears to have suffered death, during the whole course of this general
persecution.
The revolt of Maxentius immediately restored peace to the churches of Italy and Africa; and the
same tyrant who oppressed every other class of his subjects, showed himself just, humane, and
even partial, towards the afflicted Christians. He depended on their gratitude and affection, and
very naturally presumed, that the injuries which they had suffered, and the dangers which they
still apprehended from his most inveterate enemy, would secure the fidelity of a party already
considerable by their numbers and opulence. Even the conduct of Maxentius towards the
bishops of Rome and Carthage may be considered as the proof of his toleration, since it is
probable that the most orthodox princes would adopt the same measures with regard to their
established clergy. Marcellus, the former of these prelates, had thrown the capital into confusion,
by the severe penance which he imposed on a great number of Christians, who, during the late
persecution, had renounced or dissembled their religion. The rage of faction broke out in
frequent and violent seditions; the blood of the faithful was shed by each other's hands, and the
exile of Marcellus, whose prudence seems to have been less eminent than his zeal, was found to
be the only measure capable of restoring peace to the distracted church of Rome. The behavior
of Mensurius, bishop of Carthage, appears to have been still more reprehensible. A deacon of
that city had published a libel against the emperor. The offender took refuge in the episcopal
palace; and though it was somewhat early to advance any claims of ecclesiastical immunities,
the bishop refused to deliver him up to the officers of justice. For this treasonable resistance,
Mensurius was summoned to court, and instead of receiving a legal sentence of death or
banishment, he was permitted, after a short examination, to return to his diocese. Such was the
happy condition of the Christian subjects of Maxentius, that whenever they were desirous of
procuring for their own use any bodies of martyrs, they were obliged to purchase them from the
most distant provinces of the East. A story is related of Aglæ, a Roman lady, descended from a
consular family, and possessed of so ample an estate, that it required the management of
seventy-three stewards. Among these Boniface was the favorite of his mistress; and as Aglæ
mixed love with devotion, it is reported that he was admitted to share her bed. Her fortune
enabled her to gratify the pious desire of obtaining some sacred relics from the East. She
intrusted Boniface with a considerable sum of gold, and a large quantity of aromatics; and her
lover, attended by twelve horsemen and three covered chariots, undertook a remote pilgrimage,
as far as Tarsus in Cilicia.
The sanguinary temper of Galerius, the first and principal author of the persecution, was
formidable to those Christians whom their misfortunes had placed within the limits of his
dominions; and it may fairly be presumed that many persons of a middle rank, who were not
confined by the chains either of wealth or of poverty, very frequently deserted their native
country, and sought a refuge in the milder climate of the West. As long as he commanded only
the armies and provinces of Illyricum, he could with difficulty either find or make a considerable
number of martyrs, in a warlike country, which had entertained the missionaries of the gospel
with more coldness and reluctance than any other part of the empire. But when Galerius had
obtained the supreme power, and the government of the East, he indulged in their fullest extent
his zeal and cruelty, not only in the provinces of Thrace and Asia, which acknowledged his
immediate jurisdiction, but in those of Syria, Palestine, and Egypt, where Maximin gratified his
own inclination, by yielding a rigorous obedience to the stern commands of his benefactor. The
frequent disappointments of his ambitious views, the experience of six years of persecution, and
the salutary reflections which a lingering and painful distemper suggested to the mind of
Galerius, at length convinced him that the most violent efforts of despotism are insufficient to
extirpate a whole people, or to subdue their religious prejudices. Desirous of repairing the
mischief that he had occasioned, he published in his own name, and in those of Licinius and
Constantine, a general edict, which, after a pompous recital of the Imperial titles, proceeded in
the following manner: --
"Among the important cares which have occupied our mind for the utility and preservation of the
empire, it was our intention to correct and reestablish all things according to the ancient laws
and public discipline of the Romans. We were particularly desirous of reclaiming into the way of
reason and nature, the deluded Christians who had renounced the religion and ceremonies
instituted by their fathers; and presumptuously despising the practice of antiquity, had invented
extravagant laws and opinions, according to the dictates of their fancy, and had collected a
various society from the different provinces of our empire. The edicts, which we have published
to enforce the worship of the gods, having exposed many of the Christians to danger and distress,
many having suffered death, and many more, who still persist in their impious folly, being left
destitute of any public exercise of religion, we are disposed to extend to those unhappy men the
effects of our wonted clemency. We permit them therefore freely to profess their private
opinions, and to assemble in their conventicles without fear or molestation, provided always that
they preserve a due respect to the established laws and government. By another rescript we shall
signify our intentions to the judges and magistrates; and we hope that our indulgence will engage
the Christians to offer up their prayers to the Deity whom they adore, for our safety and
prosperity for their own, and for that of the republic." It is not usually in the language of edicts
and manifestos that we should search for the real character or the secret motives of princes; but
as these were the words of a dying emperor, his situation, perhaps, may be admitted as a pledge
of his sincerity.
When Galerius subscribed this edict of toleration, he was well assured that Licinius would
readily comply with the inclinations of his friend and benefactor, and that any measures in favor
of the Christians would obtain the approbation of Constantine. But the emperor would not
venture to insert in the preamble the name of Maximin, whose consent was of the greatest
importance, and who succeeded a few days afterwards to the provinces of Asia. In the first six
months, however, of his new reign, Maximin affected to adopt the prudent counsels of his
predecessor; and though he never condescended to secure the tranquillity of the church by a
public edict, Sabinus, his Prætorian præfect, addressed a circular letter to all the governors and
magistrates of the provinces, expatiating on the Imperial clemency, acknowledging the
invincible obstinacy of the Christians, and directing the officers of justice to cease their
ineffectual prosecutions, and to connive at the secret assemblies of those enthusiasts. In
consequence of these orders, great numbers of Christians were released from prison, or delivered
from the mines. The confessors, singing hymns of triumph, returned into their own countries;
and those who had yielded to the violence of the tempest, solicited with tears of repentance their
readmission into the bosom of the church.
But this treacherous calm was of short duration; nor could the Christians of the East place any
confidence in the character of their sovereign. Cruelty and superstition were the ruling passions
of the soul of Maximin. The former suggested the means, the latter pointed out the objects of
persecution. The emperor was devoted to the worship of the gods, to the study of magic, and to
the belief of oracles. The prophets or philosophers, whom he revered as the favorites of Heaven,
were frequently raised to the government of provinces, and admitted into his most secret
councils. They easily convinced him that the Christians had been indebted for their victories to
their regular discipline, and that the weakness of polytheism had principally flowed from a want
of union and subordination among the ministers of religion. A system of government was
therefore instituted, which was evidently copied from the policy of the church. In all the great
cities of the empire, the temples were repaired and beautified by the order of Maximin, and the
officiating priests of the various deities were subjected to the authority of a superior pontiff
destined to oppose the bishop, and to promote the cause of paganism. These pontiffs
acknowledged, in their turn, the supreme jurisdiction of the metropolitans or high priests of the
province, who acted as the immediate vicegerents of the emperor himself. A white robe was the
ensign of their dignity; and these new prelates were carefully selected from the most noble and
opulent families. By the influence of the magistrates, and of the sacerdotal order, a great number
of dutiful addresses were obtained, particularly from the cities of Nicomedia, Antioch, and Tyre,
which artfully represented the well-known intentions of the court as the general sense of the
people; solicited the emperor to consult the laws of justice rather than the dictates of his
clemency; expressed their abhorrence of the Christians, and humbly prayed that those impious
sectaries might at least be excluded from the limits of their respective territories. The answer of
Maximin to the address which he obtained from the citizens of Tyre is still extant. He praises
their zeal and devotion in terms of the highest satisfaction, descants on the obstinate impiety of
the Christians, and betrays, by the readiness with which he consents to their banishment, that he
considered himself as receiving, rather than as conferring, an obligation. The priests as well as
the magistrates were empowered to enforce the execution of his edicts, which were engraved on
tables of brass; and though it was recommended to them to avoid the effusion of blood, the most
cruel and ignominious punishments were inflicted on the refractory Christians.
The Asiatic Christians had every thing to dread from the severity of a bigoted monarch who
prepared his measures of violence with such deliberate policy. But a few months had scarcely
elapsed before the edicts published by the two Western emperors obliged Maximin to suspend
the prosecution of his designs: the civil war which he so rashly undertook against Licinius
employed all his attention; and the defeat and death of Maximin soon delivered the church from
the last and most implacable of her enemies.
In this general view of the persecution, which was first authorized by the edicts of Diocletian, I
have purposely refrained from describing the particular sufferings and deaths of the Christian
martyrs. It would have been an easy task, from the history of Eusebius, from the declamations of
Lactantius, and from the most ancient acts, to collect a long series of horrid and disgustful
pictures, and to fill many pages with racks and scourges, with iron hooks and red-hot beds, and
with all the variety of tortures which fire and steel, savage beasts, and more savage executioners,
could inflict upon the human body. These melancholy scenes might be enlivened by a crowd of
visions and miracles destined either to delay the death, to celebrate the triumph, or to discover
the relics of those canonized saints who suffered for the name of Christ. But I cannot determine
what I ought to transcribe, till I am satisfied how much I ought to believe. The gravest of the
ecclesiastical historians, Eusebius himself, indirectly confesses, that he has related whatever
might redound to the glory, and that he has suppressed all that could tend to the disgrace, of
religion. Such an acknowledgment will naturally excite a suspicion that a writer who has so
openly violated one of the fundamental laws of history, has not paid a very strict regard to the
observance of the other; and the suspicion will derive additional credit from the character of
Eusebius, * which was less tinctured with credulity, and more practised in the arts of courts, than
that of almost any of his contemporaries. On some particular occasions, when the magistrates
were exasperated by some personal motives of interest or resentment, the rules of prudence, and
perhaps of decency, to overturn the altars, to pour out imprecations against the emperors, or to
strike the judge as he sat on his tribunal, it may be presumed, that every mode of torture which
cruelty could invent, or constancy could endure, was exhausted on those devoted victims. Two
circumstances, however, have been unwarily mentioned, which insinuate that the general
treatment of the Christians, who had been apprehended by the officers of justice, was less
intolerable than it is usually imagined to have been. 1. The confessors who were condemned to
work in the mines were permitted by the humanity or the negligence of their keepers to build
chapels, and freely to profess their religion in the midst of those dreary habitations. 2. The
bishops were obliged to check and to censure the forward zeal of the Christians, who voluntarily
threw themselves into the hands of the magistrates. Some of these were persons oppressed by
poverty and debts, who blindly sought to terminate a miserable existence by a glorious death.
Others were allured by the hope that a short confinement would expiate the sins of a whole life;
and others again were actuated by the less honorable motive of deriving a plentiful subsistence,
and perhaps a considerable profit, from the alms which the charity of the faithful bestowed on
the prisoners. After the church had triumphed over all her enemies, the interest as well as vanity
of the captives prompted them to magnify the merit of their respective sufferings. A convenient
distance of time or place gave an ample scope to the progress of fiction; and the frequent
instances which might be alleged of holy martyrs, whose wounds had been instantly healed,
whose strength had been renewed, and whose lost members had miraculously been restored,
were extremely convenient for the purpose of removing every difficulty, and of silencing every
objection. The most extravagant legends, as they conduced to the honor of the church, were
applauded by the credulous multitude, countenanced by the power of the clergy, and attested by
the suspicious evidence of ecclesiastical history.
Chapter XVI: Conduct Towards The Christians, From Nero To Constantine. -- Part VIII.
The vague descriptions of exile and imprisonment, of pain and torture, are so easily exaggerated
or softened by the pencil of an artful orator, * that we are naturally induced to inquire into a fact
of a more distinct and stubborn kind; the number of persons who suffered death in consequence
of the edicts published by Diocletian, his associates, and his successors. The recent legendaries
record whole armies and cities, which were at once swept away by the undistinguishing rage of
persecution. The more ancient writers content themselves with pouring out a liberal effusion of
loose and tragical invectives, without condescending to ascertain the precise number of those
persons who were permitted to seal with their blood their belief of the gospel. From the history
of Eusebius, it may, however, be collected, that only nine bishops were punished with death; and
we are assured, by his particular enumeration of the martyrs of Palestine, that no more than
ninety-two Christians were entitled to that honorable appellation. As we are unacquainted with
the degree of episcopal zeal and courage which prevailed at that time, it is not in our power to
draw any useful inferences from the former of these facts: but the latter may serve to justify a
very important and probable conclusion. According to the distribution of Roman provinces,
Palestine may be considered as the sixteenth part of the Eastern empire: and since there were
some governors, who from a real or affected clemency had preserved their hands unstained with
the blood of the faithful, it is reasonable to believe, that the country which had given birth to
Christianity, produced at least the sixteenth part of the martyrs who suffered death within the
dominions of Galerius and Maximin; the whole might consequently amount to about fifteen
hundred, a number which, if it is equally divided between the ten years of the persecution, will
allow an annual consumption of one hundred and fifty martyrs. Allotting the same proportion to
the provinces of Italy, Africa, and perhaps Spain, where, at the end of two or three years, the
rigor of the penal laws was either suspended or abolished, the multitude of Christians in the
Roman empire, on whom a capital punishment was inflicted by a judicial, sentence, will be
reduced to somewhat less than two thousand persons. Since it cannot be doubted that the
Christians were more numerous, and their enemies more exasperated, in the time of Diocletian,
than they had ever been in any former persecution, this probable and moderate computation may
teach us to estimate the number of primitive saints and martyrs who sacrificed their lives for the
important purpose of introducing Christianity into the world.
We shall conclude this chapter by a melancholy truth, which obtrudes itself on the reluctant
mind; that even admitting, without hesitation or inquiry, all that history has recorded, or
devotion has feigned, on the subject of martyrdoms, it must still be acknowledged, that the
Christians, in the course of their intestine dissensions, have inflicted far greater severities on
each other, than they had experienced from the zeal of infidels. During the ages of ignorance
which followed the subversion of the Roman empire in the West, the bishops of the Imperial city
extended their dominion over the laity as well as clergy of the Latin church. The fabric of
superstition which they had erected, and which might long have defied the feeble efforts of
reason, was at length assaulted by a crowd of daring fanatics, who from the twelfth to the
sixteenth century assumed the popular character of reformers. The church of Rome defended by
violence the empire which she had acquired by fraud; a system of peace and benevolence was
soon disgraced by proscriptions, war, massacres, and the institution of the holy office. And as the
reformers were animated by the love of civil as well as of religious freedom, the Catholic
princes connected their own interest with that of the clergy, and enforced by fire and the sword
the terrors of spiritual censures. In the Netherlands alone, more than one hundred thousand of
the subjects of Charles V. are said to have suffered by the hand of the executioner; and this
extraordinary number is attested by Grotius, a man of genius and learning, who preserved his
moderation amidst the fury of contending sects, and who composed the annals of his own age
and country, at a time when the invention of printing had facilitated the means of intelligence,
and increased the danger of detection. If we are obliged to submit our belief to the authority of
Grotius, it must be allowed, that the number of Protestants, who were executed in a single
province and a single reign, far exceeded that of the primitive martyrs in the space of three
centuries, and of the Roman empire. But if the improbability of the fact itself should prevail over
the weight of evidence; if Grotius should be convicted of exaggerating the merit and sufferings
of the Reformers; we shall be naturally led to inquire what confidence can be placed in the
doubtful and imperfect monuments of ancient credulity; what degree of credit can be assigned to
a courtly bishop, and a passionate declaimer, * who, under the protection of Constantine,
enjoyed the exclusive privilege of recording the persecutions inflicted on the Christians by the
vanquished rivals or disregarded predecessors of their gracious sovereign.
Chapter XVII: Foundation Of Constantinople.
Part I.
Foundation Of Constantinople. -- Political System Constantine, And His Successors. -- Military
Discipline. -- The Palace. -- The Finances.
The unfortunate Licinius was the last rival who opposed the greatness, and the last captive who
adorned the triumph, of Constantine. After a tranquil and prosperous reign, the conqueror
bequeathed to his family the inheritance of the Roman empire; a new capital, a new policy, and a
new religion; and the innovations which he established have been embraced and consecrated by
succeeding generations. The age of the great Constantine and his sons is filled with important
events; but the historian must be oppressed by their number and variety, unless he diligently
separates from each other the scenes which are connected only by the order of time. He will
describe the political institutions that gave strength and stability to the empire, before he
proceeds to relate the wars and revolutions which hastened its decline. He will adopt the division
unknown to the ancients of civil and ecclesiastical affairs: the victory of the Christians, and their
intestine discord, will supply copious and distinct materials both for edification and for scandal.
After the defeat and abdication of Licinius, his victorious rival proceeded to lay the foundations
of a city destined to reign in future times, the mistress of the East, and to survive the empire and
religion of Constantine. The motives, whether of pride or of policy, which first induced
Diocletian to withdraw himself from the ancient seat of government, had acquired additional
weight by the example of his successors, and the habits of forty years. Rome was insensibly
confounded with the dependent kingdoms which had once acknowledged her supremacy; and the
country of the Cæsars was viewed with cold indifference by a martial prince, born in the
neighborhood of the Danube, educated in the courts and armies of Asia, and invested with the
purple by the legions of Britain. The Italians, who had received Constantine as their deliverer,
submissively obeyed the edicts which he sometimes condescended to address to the senate and
people of Rome; but they were seldom honored with the presence of their new sovereign. During
the vigor of his age, Constantine, according to the various exigencies of peace and war, moved
with slow dignity, or with active diligence, along the frontiers of his extensive dominions; and
was always prepared to take the field either against a foreign or a domestic enemy. But as he
gradually reached the summit of prosperity and the decline of life, he began to meditate the
design of fixing in a more permanent station the strength as well as majesty of the throne. In the
choice of an advantageous situation, he preferred the confines of Europe and Asia; to curb with a
powerful arm the barbarians who dwelt between the Danube and the Tanais; to watch with an
eye of jealousy the conduct of the Persian monarch, who indignantly supported the yoke of an
ignominious treaty. With these views, Diocletian had selected and embellished the residence of
Nicomedia: but the memory of Diocletian was justly abhorred by the protector of the church: and
Constantine was not insensible to the ambition of founding a city which might perpetuate the
glory of his own name. During the late operations of the war against Licinius, he had sufficient
opportunity to contemplate, both as a soldier and as a statesman, the incomparable position of
Byzantium; and to observe how strongly it was guarded by nature against a hostile attack, whilst
it was accessible on every side to the benefits of commercial intercourse. Many ages before
Constantine, one of the most judicious historians of antiquity had described the advantages of a
situation, from whence a feeble colony of Greeks derived the command of the sea, and the
honors of a flourishing and independent republic.
If we survey Byzantium in the extent which it acquired with the august name of Constantinople,
the figure of the Imperial city may be represented under that of an unequal triangle. The obtuse
point, which advances towards the east and the shores of Asia, meets and repels the waves of the
Thracian Bosphorus. The northern side of the city is bounded by the harbor; and the southern is
washed by the Propontis, or Sea of Marmara. The basis of the triangle is opposed to the west,
and terminates the continent of Europe. But the admirable form and division of the circumjacent
land and water cannot, without a more ample explanation, be clearly or sufficiently understood.
The winding channel through which the waters of the Euxine flow with a rapid and incessant
course towards the Mediterranean, received the appellation of Bosphorus, a name not less
celebrated in the history, than in the fables, of antiquity. A crowd of temples and of votive
altars, profusely scattered along its steep and woody banks, attested the unskilfulness, the terrors,
and the devotion of the Grecian navigators, who, after the example of the Argonauts, explored
the dangers of the inhospitable Euxine. On these banks tradition long preserved the memory of
the palace of Phineus, infested by the obscene harpies; and of the sylvan reign of Amycus, who
defied the son of Leda to the combat of the cestus. The straits of the Bosphorus are terminated
by the Cyanean rocks, which, according to the description of the poets, had once floated on the
face of the waters; and were destined by the gods to protect the entrance of the Euxine against
the eye of profane curiosity. From the Cyanean rocks to the point and harbor of Byzantium, the
winding length of the Bosphorus extends about sixteen miles, and its most ordinary breadth may
be computed at about one mile and a half. The new castles of Europe and Asia are constructed,
on either continent, upon the foundations of two celebrated temples, of Serapis and of Jupiter
Urius. The oldcastles, a work of the Greek emperors, command the narrowest part of the channel
in a place where the opposite banks advance within five hundred paces of each other. These
fortresses were destroyed and strengthened by Mahomet the Second, when he meditated the
siege of Constantinople: but the Turkish conqueror was most probably ignorant, that near two
thousand years before his reign, continents by a bridge of boats. At a small distance from the old
castles we discover the little town of Chrysopolis, or Scutari, which may almost be considered as
the Asiatic suburb of Constantinople. The Bosphorus, as it begins to open into the Propontis,
passes between Byzantium and Chalcedon. The latter of those cities was built by the Greeks, a
few years before the former; and the blindness of its founders, who overlooked the superior
advantages of the opposite coast, has been stigmatized by a proverbial expression of contempt.
The harbor of Constantinople, which may be considered as an arm of the Bosphorus, obtained, in
a very remote period, the denomination of the Golden Horn. The curve which it describes might
be compared to the horn of a stag, or as it should seem, with more propriety, to that of an ox.
The epithet of golden was expressive of the riches which every wind wafted from the most
distant countries into the secure and capacious port of Constantinople. The River Lycus, formed
by the conflux of two little streams, pours into the harbor a perpetual supply of fresh water,
which serves to cleanse the bottom, and to invite the periodical shoals of fish to seek their retreat
in that convenient recess. As the vicissitudes of tides are scarcely felt in those seas, the constant
depth of the harbor allows goods to be landed on the quays without the assistance of boats; and it
has been observed, that in many places the largest vessels may rest their prows against the
houses, while their sterns are floating in the water. From the mouth of the Lycus to that of the
harbor, this arm of the Bosphorus is more than seven miles in length. The entrance is about five
hundred yards broad, and a strong chain could be occasionally drawn across it, to guard the port
and city from the attack of a hostile navy.
Between the Bosphorus and the Hellespont, the shores of Europe and Asia, receding on either
side, enclose the sea of Marmara, which was known to the ancients by the denomination of
Propontis. The navigation from the issue of the Bosphorus to the entrance of the Hellespont is
about one hundred and twenty miles. Those who steer their westward course through the middle
of the Propontis, amt at once descry the high lands of Thrace and Bithynia, and never lose sight
of the lofty summit of Mount Olympus, covered with eternal snows. They leave on the left a
deep gulf, at the bottom of which Nicomedia was seated, the Imperial residence of Diocletian;
and they pass the small islands of Cyzicus and Proconnesus before they cast anchor at Gallipoli;
where the sea, which separates Asia from Europe, is again contracted into a narrow channel.
The geographers who, with the most skilful accuracy, have surveyed the form and extent of the
Hellespont, assign about sixty miles for the winding course, and about three miles for the
ordinary breadth of those celebrated straits. But the narrowest part of the channel is found to the
northward of the old Turkish castles between the cities of Sestus and Abydus. It was here that
the adventurous Leander braved the passage of the flood for the possession of his mistress. It
was here likewise, in a place where the distance between the opposite banks cannot exceed five
hundred paces, that Xerxes imposed a stupendous bridge of boats, for the purpose of transporting
into Europe a hundred and seventy myriads of barbarians. A sea contracted within such narrow
limits may seem but ill to deserve the singular epithet of broad, which Homer, as well as
Orpheus, has frequently bestowed on the Hellespont. * But our ideas of greatness are of a
relative nature: the traveller, and especially the poet, who sailed along the Hellespont, who
pursued the windings of the stream, and contemplated the rural scenery, which appeared on
every side to terminate the prospect, insensibly lost the remembrance of the sea; and his fancy
painted those celebrated straits, with all the attributes of a mighty river flowing with a swift
current, in the midst of a woody and inland country, and at length, through a wide mouth,
discharging itself into the Ægean or Archipelago. Ancient Troy, seated on a an eminence at the
foot of Mount Ida, overlooked the mouth of the Hellespont, which scarcely received an
accession of waters from the tribute of those immortal rivulets the Simois and Scamander. The
Grecian camp had stretched twelve miles along the shore from the Sigæan to the Rhætean
promontory; and the flanks of the army were guarded by the bravest chiefs who fought under the
banners of Agamemnon. The first of those promontories was occupied by Achilles with his
invincible myrmidons, and the dauntless Ajax pitched his tents on the other. After Ajax had
fallen a sacrifice to his disappointed pride, and to the ingratitude of the Greeks, his sepulchre
was erected on the ground where he had defended the navy against the rage of Jove and of
Hector; and the citizens of the rising town of Rhæteum celebrated his memory with divine
honors. Before Constantine gave a just preference to the situation of Byzantium, he had
conceived the design of erecting the seat of empire on this celebrated spot, from whence the
Romans derived their fabulous origin. The extensive plain which lies below ancient Troy,
towards the Rhætean promontory and the tomb of Ajax, was first chosen for his new capital; and
though the undertaking was soon relinquished the stately remains of unfinished walls and towers
attracted the notice of all who sailed through the straits of the Hellespont.
We are at present qualified to view the advantageous position of Constantinople; which appears
to have been formed by nature for the centre and capital of a great monarchy. Situated in the
forty-first degree of latitude, the Imperial city commanded, from her seven hills, the opposite
shores of Europe and Asia; the climate was healthy and temperate, the soil fertile, the harbor
secure and capacious; and the approach on the side of the continent was of small extent and easy
defence. The Bosphorus and the Hellespont may be considered as the two gates of
Constantinople; and the prince who possessed those important passages could always shut them
against a naval enemy, and open them to the fleets of commerce. The preservation of the eastern
provinces may, in some degree, be ascribed to the policy of Constantine, as the barbarians of the
Euxine, who in the preceding age had poured their armaments into the heart of the
Mediterranean, soon desisted from the exercise of piracy, and despaired of forcing this
insurmountable barrier. When the gates of the Hellespont and Bosphorus were shut, the capital
still enjoyed within their spacious enclosure every production which could supply the wants, or
gratify the luxury, of its numerous inhabitants. The sea-coasts of Thrace and Bithynia, which
languish under the weight of Turkish oppression, still exhibit a rich prospect of vineyards, of
gardens, and of plentiful harvests; and the Propontis has ever been renowned for an
inexhaustible store of the most exquisite fish, that are taken in their stated seasons, without skill,
and almost without labor. But when the passages of the straits were thrown open for trade, they
alternately admitted the natural and artificial riches of the north and south, of the Euxine, and of
the Mediterranean. Whatever rude commodities were collected in the forests of Germany and
Scythia, and far as the sources of the Tanais and the Borysthenes; whatsoever was manufactured
by the skill of Europe or Asia; the corn of Egypt, and the gems and spices of the farthest India,
were brought by the varying winds into the port of Constantinople, which for many ages
attracted the commerce of the ancient world.
[See Basilica Of Constantinople]
The prospect of beauty, of safety, and of wealth, united in a single spot, was sufficient to justify
the choice of Constantine. But as some decent mixture of prodigy and fable has, in every age,
been supposed to reflect a becoming majesty on the origin of great cities, the emperor was
desirous of ascribing his resolution, not so much to the uncertain counsels of human policy, as to
the infallible and eternal decrees of divine wisdom. In one of his laws he has been careful to
instruct posterity, that in obedience to the commands of God, he laid the everlasting foundations
of Constantinople: and though he has not condescended to relate in what manner the celestial
inspiration was communicated to his mind, the defect of his modest silence has been liberally
supplied by the ingenuity of succeeding writers; who describe the nocturnal vision which
appeared to the fancy of Constantine, as he slept within the walls of Byzantium. The tutelar
genius of the city, a venerable matron sinking under the weight of years and infirmities, was
suddenly transformed into a blooming maid, whom his own hands adorned with all the symbols
of Imperial greatness. The monarch awoke, interpreted the auspicious omen, and obeyed,
without hesitation, the will of Heaven The day which gave birth to a city or colony was
celebrated by the Romans with such ceremonies as had been ordained by a generous
superstition; and though Constantine might omit some rites which savored too strongly of their
Pagan origin, yet he was anxious to leave a deep impression of hope and respect on the minds of
the spectators. On foot, with a lance in his hand, the emperor himself led the solemn procession;
and directed the line, which was traced as the boundary of the destined capital: till the growing
circumference was observed with astonishment by the assistants, who, at length, ventured to
observe, that he had already exceeded the most ample measure of a great city. "I shall still
advance," replied Constantine, "till He, the invisible guide who marches before me, thinks
proper to stop." Without presuming to investigate the nature or motives of this extraordinary
conductor, we shall content ourselves with the more humble task of describing the extent and
limits of Constantinople.
In the actual state of the city, the palace and gardens of the Seraglio occupy the eastern
promontory, the first of the seven hills, and cover about one hundred and fifty acres of our own
measure. The seat of Turkish jealousy and despotism is erected on the foundations of a Grecian
republic; but it may be supposed that the Byzantines were tempted by the conveniency of the
harbor to extend their habitations on that side beyond the modern limits of the Seraglio. The new
walls of Constantine stretched from the port to the Propontis across the enlarged breadth of the
triangle, at the distance of fifteen stadia from the ancient fortification; and with the city of
Byzantium they enclosed five of the seven hills, which, to the eyes of those who approach
Constantinople, appear to rise above each other in beautiful order. About a century after the
death of the founder, the new buildings, extending on one side up the harbor, and on the other
along the Propontis, already covered the narrow ridge of the sixth, and the broad summit of the
seventh hill. The necessity of protecting those suburbs from the incessant inroads of the
barbarians engaged the younger Theodosius to surround his capital with an adequate and
permanent enclosure of walls. From the eastern promontory to the golden gate, the extreme
length of Constantinople was about three Roman miles; the circumference measured between
ten and eleven; and the surface might be computed as equal to about two thousand English acres.
It is impossible to justify the vain and credulous exaggerations of modern travellers, who have
sometimes stretched the limits of Constantinople over the adjacent villages of the European, and
even of the Asiatic coast. But the suburbs of Pera and Galata, though situate beyond the harbor,
may deserve to be considered as a part of the city; and this addition may perhaps authorize the
measure of a Byzantine historian, who assigns sixteen Greek (about fourteen Roman) miles for
the circumference of his native city. Such an extent may not seem unworthy of an Imperial
residence. Yet Constantinople must yield to Babylon and Thebes, to ancient Rome, to London,
and even to Paris.
Chapter XVII: Foundation Of Constantinople. -- Part II.
The master of the Roman world, who aspired to erect an eternal monument of the glories of his
reign could employ in the prosecution of that great work, the wealth, the labor, and all that yet
remained of the genius of obedient millions. Some estimate may be formed of the expense
bestowed with Imperial liberality on the foundation of Constantinople, by the allowance of about
two millions five hundred thousand pounds for the construction of the walls, the porticos, and
the aqueducts. The forests that overshadowed the shores of the Euxine, and the celebrated
quarries of white marble in the little island of Proconnesus, supplied an inexhaustible stock of
materials, ready to be conveyed, by the convenience of a short water carriage, to the harbor of
Byzantium. A multitude of laborers and artificers urged the conclusion of the work with
incessant toil: but the impatience of Constantine soon discovered, that, in the decline of the arts,
the skill as well as numbers of his architects bore a very unequal proportion to the greatness of
his designs. The magistrates of the most distant provinces were therefore directed to institute
schools, to appoint professors, and by the hopes of rewards and privileges, to engage in the study
and practice of architecture a sufficient number of ingenious youths, who had received a liberal
education. The buildings of the new city were executed by such artificers as the reign of
Constantine could afford; but they were decorated by the hands of the most celebrated masters
of the age of Pericles and Alexander. To revive the genius of Phidias and Lysippus, surpassed
indeed the power of a Roman emperor; but the immortal productions which they had bequeathed
to posterity were exposed without defence to the rapacious vanity of a despot. By his commands
the cities of Greece and Asia were despoiled of their most valuable ornaments. The trophies of
memorable wars, the objects of religious veneration, the most finished statues of the gods and
heroes, of the sages and poets, of ancient times, contributed to the splendid triumph of
Constantinople; and gave occasion to the remark of the historian Cedrenus, who observes, with
some enthusiasm, that nothing seemed wanting except the souls of the illustrious men whom
these admirable monuments were intended to represent. But it is not in the city of Constantine,
nor in the declining period of an empire, when the human mind was depressed by civil and
religious slavery, that we should seek for the souls of Homer and of Demosthenes.
During the siege of Byzantium, the conqueror had pitched his tent on the commanding eminence
of the second hill. To perpetuate the memory of his success, he chose the same advantageous
position for the principal Forum; which appears to have been of a circular, or rather elliptical
form. The two opposite entrances formed triumphal arches; the porticos, which enclosed it on
every side, were filled with statues; and the centre of the Forum was occupied by a lofty column,
of which a mutilated fragment is now degraded by the appellation of the burnt pillar. This
column was erected on a pedestal of white marble twenty feet high; and was composed of ten
pieces of porphyry, each of which measured about ten feet in height, and about thirty-three in
circumference. On the summit of the pillar, above one hundred and twenty feet from the
ground, stood the colossal statue of Apollo. It was a bronze, had been transported either from
Athens or from a town of Phrygia, and was supposed to be the work of Phidias. The artist had
represented the god of day, or, as it was afterwards interpreted, the emperor Constantine himself,
with a sceptre in his right hand, the globe of the world in his left, and a crown of rays glittering
on his head. The Circus, or Hippodrome, was a stately building about four hundred paces in
length, and one hundred in breadth. The space between the two met or goals were filled with
statues and obelisks; and we may still remark a very singular fragment of antiquity; the bodies of
three serpents, twisted into one pillar of brass. Their triple heads had once supported the golden
tripod which, after the defeat of Xerxes, was consecrated in the temple of Delphi by the
victorious Greeks. The beauty of the Hippodrome has been long since defaced by the rude hands
of the Turkish conquerors; but, under the similar appellation of Atmeidan, it still serves as a
place of exercise for their horses. From the throne, whence the emperor viewed the Circensian
games, a winding staircase descended to the palace; a magnificent edifice, which scarcely
yielded to the residence of Rome itself, and which, together with the dependent courts, gardens,
and porticos, covered a considerable extent of ground upon the banks of the Propontis between
the Hippodrome and the church of St. Sophia. We might likewise celebrate the baths, which still
retained the name of Zeuxippus, after they had been enriched, by the munificence of
Constantine, with lofty columns, various marbles, and above threescore statues of bronze. But
we should deviate from the design of this history, if we attempted minutely to describe the
different buildings or quarters of the city. It may be sufficient to observe, that whatever could
adorn the dignity of a great capital, or contribute to the benefit or pleasure of its numerous
inhabitants, was contained within the walls of Constantinople. A particular description,
composed about a century after its foundation, enumerates a capitol or school of learning, a
circus, two theatres, eight public, and one hundred and fifty-three private baths, fifty-two
porticos, five granaries, eight aqueducts or reservoirs of water, four spacious halls for the
meetings of the senate or courts of justice, fourteen churches, fourteen palaces, and four
thousand three hundred and eighty-eight houses, which, for their size or beauty, deserved to be
distinguished from the multitude of plebeian inhabitants.
The populousness of his favored city was the next and most serious object of the attention of its
founder. In the dark ages which succeeded the translation of the empire, the remote and the
immediate consequences of that memorable event were strangely confounded by the vanity of
the Greeks and the credulity of the Latins. It was asserted, and believed, that all the noble
families of Rome, the senate, and the equestrian order, with their innumerable attendants, had
followed their emperor to the banks of the Propontis; that a spurious race of strangers and
plebeians was left to possess the solitude of the ancient capital; and that the lands of Italy, long
since converted into gardens, were at once deprived of cultivation and inhabitants. In the course
of this history, such exaggerations will be reduced to their just value: yet, since the growth of
Constantinople cannot be ascribed to the general increase of mankind and of industry, it must be
admitted that this artificial colony was raised at the expense of the ancient cities of the empire.
Many opulent senators of Rome, and of the eastern provinces, were probably invited by
Constantine to adopt for their country the fortunate spot, which he had chosen for his own
residence. The invitations of a master are scarcely to be distinguished from commands; and the
liberality of the emperor obtained a ready and cheerful obedience. He bestowed on his favorites
the palaces which he had built in the several quarters of the city, assigned them lands and
pensions for the support of their dignity, and alienated the demesnes of Pontus and Asia to grant
hereditary estates by the easy tenure of maintaining a house in the capital. But these
encouragements and obligations soon became superfluous, and were gradually abolished.
Wherever the seat of government is fixed, a considerable part of the public revenue will be
expended by the prince himself, by his ministers, by the officers of justice, and by the domestics
of the palace. The most wealthy of the provincials will be attracted by the powerful motives of
interest and duty, of amusement and curiosity. A third and more numerous class of inhabitants
will insensibly be formed, of servants, of artificers, and of merchants, who derive their
subsistence from their own labor, and from the wants or luxury of the superior ranks. In less than
a century, Constantinople disputed with Rome itself the preeminence of riches and numbers.
New piles of buildings, crowded together with too little regard to health or convenience, scarcely
allowed the intervals of narrow streets for the perpetual throng of men, of horses, and of
carriages. The allotted space of ground was insufficient to contain the increasing people; and the
additional foundations, which, on either side, were advanced into the sea, might alone have
composed a very considerable city.
The frequent and regular distributions of wine and oil, of corn or bread, of money or provisions,
had almost exempted the poorest citizens of Rome from the necessity of labor. The
magnificence of the first Cæsars was in some measure imitated by the founder of
Constantinople: but his liberality, however it might excite the applause of the people, has in
curred the censure of posterity. A nation of legislators and conquerors might assert their claim to
the harvests of Africa, which had been purchased with their blood; and it was artfully contrived
by Augustus, that, in the enjoyment of plenty, the Romans should lose the memory of freedom.
But the prodigality of Constantine could not be excused by any consideration either of public or
private interest; and the annual tribute of corn imposed upon Egypt for the benefit of his new
capital, was applied to feed a lazy and insolent populace, at the expense of the husbandmen of an
industrious province. * Some other regulations of this emperor are less liable to blame, but they
are less deserving of notice. He divided Constantinople into fourteen regions or quarters,
dignified the public council with the appellation of senate, communicated to the citizens the
privileges of Italy, and bestowed on the rising city the title of Colony, the first and most favored
daughter of ancient Rome. The venerable parent still maintained the legal and acknowledged
supremacy, which was due to her age, her dignity, and to the remembrance of her former
greatness.
As Constantine urged the progress of the work with the impatience of a lover, the walls, the
porticos, and the principal edifices were completed in a few years, or, according to another
account, in a few months; but this extraordinary diligence should excite the less admiration,
since many of the buildings were finished in so hasty and imperfect a manner, that under the
succeeding reign, they were preserved with difficulty from impending ruin. But while they
displayed the vigor and freshness of youth, the founder prepared to celebrate the dedication of
his city. The games and largesses which crowned the pomp of this memorable festival may
easily be supposed; but there is one circumstance of a more singular and permanent nature,
which ought not entirely to be overlooked. As often as the birthday of the city returned, the
statute of Constantine, framed by his order, of gilt wood, and bearing in his right hand a small
image of the genius of the place, was erected on a triumphal car. The guards, carrying white
tapers, and clothed in their richest apparel, accompanied the solemn procession as it moved
through the Hippodrome. When it was opposite to the throne of the reigning emperor, he rose
from his seat, and with grateful reverence adored the memory of his predecessor. At the festival
of the dedication, an edict, engraved on a column of marble, bestowed the title of Second or
New Rome on the city of Constantine. But the name of Constantinople has prevailed over that
honorable epithet; and after the revolution of fourteen centuries, still perpetuates the fame of its
author.
The foundation of a new capital is naturally connected with the establishment of a new form of
civil and military administration. The distinct view of the complicated system of policy,
introduced by Diocletian, improved by Constantine, and completed by his immediate successors,
may not only amuse the fancy by the singular picture of a great empire, but will tend to illustrate
the secret and internal causes of its rapid decay. In the pursuit of any remarkable institution, we
may be frequently led into the more early or the more recent times of the Roman history; but the
proper limits of this inquiry will be included within a period of about one hundred and thirty
years, from the accession of Constantine to the publication of the Theodosian code; from which,
as well as from the Notitia * of the East and West, we derive the most copious and authentic
information of the state of the empire. This variety of objects will suspend, for some time, the
course of the narrative; but the interruption will be censured only by those readers who are
insensible to the importance of laws and manners, while they peruse, with eager curiosity, the
transient intrigues of a court, or the accidental event of a battle.
Chapter XVII: Foundation Of Constantinople. -- Part III.
The manly pride of the Romans, content with substantial power, had left to the vanity of the East
the forms and ceremonies of ostentatious greatness. But when they lost even the semblance of
those virtues which were derived from their ancient freedom, the simplicity of Roman manners
was insensibly corrupted by the stately affectation of the courts of Asia. The distinctions of
personal merit and influence, so conspicuous in a republic, so feeble and obscure under a
monarchy, were abolished by the despotism of the emperors; who substituted in their room a
severe subordination of rank and office from the titled slaves who were seated on the steps of the
throne, to the meanest instruments of arbitrary power. This multitude of abject dependants was
interested in the support of the actual government from the dread of a revolution, which might at
once confound their hopes and intercept the reward of their services. In this divine hierarchy (for
such it is frequently styled) every rank was marked with the most scrupulous exactness, and its
dignity was displayed in a variety of trifling and solemn ceremonies, which it was a study to
learn, and a sacrilege to neglect. The purity of the Latin language was debased, by adopting, in
the intercourse of pride and flattery, a profusion of epithets, which Tully would scarcely have
understood, and which Augustus would have rejected with indignation. The principal officers of
the empire were saluted, even by the sovereign himself, with the deceitful titles of your
Sincerity, your Gravity, your Excellency, your Eminence, your sublime and wonderful
Magnitude, your illustrious and magnificent Highness. The codicils or patents of their office
were curiously emblazoned with such emblems as were best adapted to explain its nature and
high dignity; the image or portrait of the reigning emperors; a triumphal car; the book of
mandates placed on a table, covered with a rich carpet, and illuminated by four tapers; the
allegorical figures of the provinces which they governed; or the appellations and standards of the
troops whom they commanded Some of these official ensigns were really exhibited in their hall
of audience; others preceded their pompous march whenever they appeared in public; and every
circumstance of their demeanor, their dress, their ornaments, and their train, was calculated to
inspire a deep reverence for the representatives of supreme majesty. By a philosophic observer,
the system of the Roman government might have been mistaken for a splendid theatre, filled
with players of every character and degree, who repeated the language, and imitated the
passions, of their original model.
All the magistrates of sufficient importance to find a place in the general state of the empire,
were accurately divided into three classes. 1. The Illustrious. 2. The Spectabiles, or
Respectable. And, 3. the Clarissimi; whom we may translate by the word Honorable. In the
times of Roman simplicity, the last-mentioned epithet was used only as a vague expression of
deference, till it became at length the peculiar and appropriated title of all who were members of
the senate, and consequently of all who, from that venerable body, were selected to govern the
provinces. The vanity of those who, from their rank and office, might claim a superior
distinction above the rest of the senatorial order, was long afterwards indulged with the new
appellation of Respectable; but the title of Illustrious was always reserved to some eminent
personages who were obeyed or reverenced by the two subordinate classes. It was communicated
only, I. To the consuls and patricians; II. To the Prætorian præfects, with the præfects of Rome
and Constantinople; III. To the masters-general of the cavalry and the infantry; and IV. To the
seven ministers of the palace, who exercised their sacred functions about the person of the
emperor. Among those illustrious magistrates who were esteemed coordinate with each other,
the seniority of appointment gave place to the union of dignities. By the expedient of honorary
codicils, the emperors, who were fond of multiplying their favors, might sometimes gratify the
vanity, though not the ambition, of impatient courtiers.
I. As long as the Roman consuls were the first magistrates of a free state, they derived their right
to power from the choice of the people. As long as the emperors condescended to disguise the
servitude which they imposed, the consuls were still elected by the real or apparent suffrage of
the senate. From the reign of Diocletian, even these vestiges of liberty were abolished, and the
successful candidates who were invested with the annual honors of the consulship, affected to
deplore the humiliating condition of their predecessors. The Scipios and the Catos had been
reduced to solicit the votes of plebeians, to pass through the tedious and expensive forms of a
popular election, and to expose their dignity to the shame of a public refusal; while their own
happier fate had reserved them for an age and government in which the rewards of virtue were
assigned by the unerring wisdom of a gracious sovereign. In the epistles which the emperor
addressed to the two consuls elect, it was declared, that they were created by his sole authority.
Their names and portraits, engraved on gilt tables of ivory, were dispersed over the empire as
presents to the provinces, the cities, the magistrates, the senate, and the people. Their solemn
inauguration was performed at the place of the Imperial residence; and during a period of one
hundred and twenty years, Rome was constantly deprived of the presence of her ancient
magistrates. On the morning of the first of January, the consuls assumed the ensigns of their
dignity. Their dress was a robe of purple, embroidered in silk and gold, and sometimes
ornamented with costly gems. On this solemn occasion they were attended by the most eminent
officers of the state and army, in the habit of senators; and the useless fasces, armed with the
once formidable axes, were borne before them by the lictors. The procession moved from the
palace to the Forum or principal square of the city; where the consuls ascended their tribunal,
and seated themselves in the curule chairs, which were framed after the fashion of ancient times.
They immediately exercised an act of jurisdiction, by the manumission of a slave, who was
brought before them for that purpose; and the ceremony was intended to represent the celebrated
action of the elder Brutus, the author of liberty and of the consulship, when he admitted among
his fellow-citizens the faithful Vindex, who had revealed the conspiracy of the Tarquins. The
public festival was continued during several days in all the principal cities in Rome, from
custom; in Constantinople, from imitation in Carthage, Antioch, and Alexandria, from the love
of pleasure, and the superfluity of wealth. In the two capitals of the empire the annual games of
the theatre, the circus, and the amphitheatre, cost four thousand pounds of gold, (about) one
hundred and sixty thousand pounds sterling: and if so heavy an expense surpassed the faculties
or the inclinations of the magistrates themselves, the sum was supplied from the Imperial
treasury. As soon as the consuls had discharged these customary duties, they were at liberty to
retire into the shade of private life, and to enjoy, during the remainder of the year, the
undisturbed contemplation of their own greatness. They no longer presided in the national
councils; they no longer executed the resolutions of peace or war. Their abilities (unless they
were employed in more effective offices) were of little moment; and their names served only as
the legal date of the year in which they had filled the chair of Marius and of Cicero. Yet it was
still felt and acknowledged, in the last period of Roman servitude, that this empty name might be
compared, and even preferred, to the possession of substantial power. The title of consul was
still the most splendid object of ambition, the noblest reward of virtue and loyalty. The emperors
themselves, who disdained the faint shadow of the republic, were conscious that they acquired
an additional splendor and majesty as often as they assumed the annual honors of the consular
dignity.
The proudest and most perfect separation which can be found in any age or country, between the
nobles and the people, is perhaps that of the Patricians and the Plebeians, as it was established in
the first age of the Roman republic. Wealth and honors, the offices of the state, and the
ceremonies of religion, were almost exclusively possessed by the former who, preserving the
purity of their blood with the most insulting jealousy, held their clients in a condition of
specious vassalage. But these distinctions, so incompatible with the spirit of a free people, were
removed, after a long struggle, by the persevering efforts of the Tribunes. The most active and
successful of the Plebeians accumulated wealth, aspired to honors, deserved triumphs,
contracted alliances, and, after some generations, assumed the pride of ancient nobility. The
Patrician families, on the other hand, whose original number was never recruited till the end of
the commonwealth, either failed in the ordinary course of nature, or were extinguished in so
many foreign and domestic wars, or, through a want of merit or fortune, insensibly mingled with
the mass of the people. Very few remained who could derive their pure and genuine origin from
the infancy of the city, or even from that of the republic, when Cæsar and Augustus, Claudius
and Vespasian, created from the body of the senate a competent number of new Patrician
families, in the hope of perpetuating an order, which was still considered as honorable and
sacred. But these artificial supplies (in which the reigning house was always included) were
rapidly swept away by the rage of tyrants, by frequent revolutions, by the change of manners, and
by the intermixture of nations. Little more was left when Constantine ascended the throne, than
a vague and imperfect tradition, that the Patricians had once been the first of the Romans. To
form a body of nobles, whose influence may restrain, while it secures the authority of the
monarch, would have been very inconsistent with the character and policy of Constantine; but
had he seriously entertained such a design, it might have exceeded the measure of his power to
ratify, by an arbitrary edict, an institution which must expect the sanction of time and of opinion.
He revived, indeed, the title of Patricians, but he revived it as a personal, not as an hereditary
distinction. They yielded only to the transient superiority of the annual consuls; but they enjoyed
the pre-eminence over all the great officers of state, with the most familiar access to the person
of the prince. This honorable rank was bestowed on them for life; and as they were usually
favorites, and ministers who had grown old in the Imperial court, the true etymology of the word
was perverted by ignorance and flattery; and the Patricians of Constantine were reverenced as
the adopted Fathers of the emperor and the republic.
II. The fortunes of the Prætorian præfects were essentially different from those of the consuls
and Patricians. The latter saw their ancient greatness evaporate in a vain title. The former, rising
by degrees from the most humble condition, were invested with the civil and military
administration of the Roman world. From the reign of Severus to that of Diocletian, the guards
and the palace, the laws and the finances, the armies and the provinces, were intrusted to their
superintending care; and, like the Viziers of the East, they held with one hand the seal, and with
the other the standard, of the empire. The ambition of the præfects, always formidable, and
sometimes fatal to the masters whom they served, was supported by the strength of the Prætorian
bands; but after those haughty troops had been weakened by Diocletian, and finally suppressed
by Constantine, the præfects, who survived their fall, were reduced without difficulty to the
station of useful and obedient ministers. When they were no longer responsible for the safety of
the emperor's person, they resigned the jurisdiction which they had hitherto claimed and
exercised over all the departments of the palace. They were deprived by Constantine of all
military command, as soon as they had ceased to lead into the field, under their immediate
orders, the flower of the Roman troops; and at length, by a singular revolution, the captains of
the guards were transformed into the civil magistrates of the provinces. According to the plan of
government instituted by Diocletian, the four princes had each their Prætorian præfect; and after
the monarchy was once more united in the person of Constantine, he still continued to create the
same number of Four Præfects, and intrusted to their care the same provinces which they already
administered. 1. The præfect of the East stretched his ample jurisdiction into the three parts of
the globe which were subject to the Romans, from the cataracts of the Nile to the banks of the
Phasis, and from the mountains of Thrace to the frontiers of Persia. 2. The important provinces
of Pannonia, Dacia, Macedonia, and Greece, once acknowledged the authority of the præfect of
Illyricum. 3. The power of the præfect of Italy was not confined to the country from whence he
derived his title; it extended over the additional territory of Rhætia as far as the banks of the
Danube, over the dependent islands of the Mediterranean, and over that part of the continent of
Africa which lies between the confines of Cyrene and those of Tingitania. 4. The præfect of the
Gauls comprehended under that plural denomination the kindred provinces of Britain and Spain,
and his authority was obeyed from the wall of Antoninus to the foot of Mount Atlas.
After the Prætorian præfects had been dismissed from all military command, the civil functions
which they were ordained to exercise over so many subject nations, were adequate to the
ambition and abilities of the most consummate ministers. To their wisdom was committed the
supreme administration of justice and of the finances, the two objects which, in a state of peace,
comprehend almost all the respective duties of the sovereign and of the people; of the former, to
protect the citizens who are obedient to the laws; of the latter, to contribute the share of their
property which is required for the expenses of the state. The coin, the highways, the posts, the
granaries, the manufactures, whatever could interest the public prosperity, was moderated by the
authority of the Prætorian præfects. As the immediate representatives of the Imperial majesty,
they were empowered to explain, to enforce, and on some occasions to modify, the general
edicts by their discretionary proclamations. They watched over the conduct of the provincial
governors, removed the negligent, and inflicted punishments on the guilty. From all the inferior
jurisdictions, an appeal in every matter of importance, either civil or criminal, might be brought
before the tribunal of the præfect; but his sentence was final and absolute; and the emperors
themselves refused to admit any complaints against the judgment or the integrity of a magistrate
whom they honored with such unbounded confidence. His appointments were suitable to his
dignity; and if avarice was his ruling passion, he enjoyed frequent opportunities of collecting a
rich harvest of fees, of presents, and of perquisites. Though the emperors no longer dreaded the
ambition of their præfects, they were attentive to counterbalance the power of this great office
by the uncertainty and shortness of its duration.
From their superior importance and dignity, Rome and Constantinople were alone excepted from
the jurisdiction of the Prætorian præfects. The immense size of the city, and the experience of
the tardy, ineffectual operation of the laws, had furnished the policy of Augustus with a specious
pretence for introducing a new magistrate, who alone could restrain a servile and turbulent
populace by the strong arm of arbitrary power. Valerius Messalla was appointed the first
præfect of Rome, that his reputation might countenance so invidious a measure; but, at the end
of a few days, that accomplished citizen resigned his office, declaring, with a spirit worthy of
the friend of Brutus, that he found himself incapable of exercising a power incompatible with
public freedom. As the sense of liberty became less exquisite, the advantages of order were
more clearly understood; and the præfect, who seemed to have been designed as a terror only to
slaves and vagrants, was permitted to extend his civil and criminal jurisdiction over the
equestrian and noble families of Rome. The prætors, annually created as the judges of law and
equity, could not long dispute the possession of the Forum with a vigorous and permanent
magistrate, who was usually admitted into the confidence of the prince. Their courts were
deserted, their number, which had once fluctuated between twelve and eighteen, was gradually
reduced to two or three, and their important functions were confined to the expensive obligation
of exhibiting games for the amusement of the people. After the office of the Roman consuls had
been changed into a vain pageant, which was rarely displayed in the capital, the præfects
assumed their vacant place in the senate, and were soon acknowledged as the ordinary presidents
of that venerable assembly. They received appeals from the distance of one hundred miles; and it
was allowed as a principle of jurisprudence, that all municipal authority was derived from them
alone. In the discharge of his laborious employment, the governor of Rome was assisted by
fifteen officers, some of whom had been originally his equals, or even his superiors. The
principal departments were relative to the command of a numerous watch, established as a
safeguard against fires, robberies, and nocturnal disorders; the custody and distribution of the
public allowance of corn and provisions; the care of the port, of the aqueducts, of the common
sewers, and of the navigation and bed of the Tyber; the inspection of the markets, the theatres,
and of the private as well as the public works. Their vigilance insured the three principal objects
of a regular police, safety, plenty, and cleanliness; and as a proof of the attention of government
to preserve the splendor and ornaments of the capital, a particular inspector was appointed for
the statues; the guardian, as it were, of that inanimate people, which, according to the
extravagant computation of an old writer, was scarcely inferior in number to the living
inhabitants of Rome. About thirty years after the foundation of Constantinople, a similar
magistrate was created in that rising metropolis, for the same uses and with the same powers. A
perfect equality was established between the dignity of the two municipal, and that of the
fourPrætorian præfects.
Chapter XVII: Foundation Of Constantinople. -- Part IV.
Those who, in the imperial hierarchy, were distinguished by the title of Respectable, formed an
intermediate class between the illustrious præfects, and the honorable magistrates of the
provinces. In this class the proconsuls of Asia, Achaia, and Africa, claimed a preëminence,
which was yielded to the remembrance of their ancient dignity; and the appeal from their
tribunal to that of the præfects was almost the only mark of their dependence. But the civil
government of the empire was distributed into thirteen great Dioceses, each of which equalled
the just measure of a powerful kingdom. The first of these dioceses was subject to the
jurisdiction of the count of the east; and we may convey some idea of the importance and variety
of his functions, by observing, that six hundred apparitors, who would be styled at present either
secretaries, or clerks, or ushers, or messengers, were employed in his immediate office. The
place of Augustal prfect of Egypt was no longer filled by a Roman knight; but the name was
retained; and the extraordinary powers which the situation of the country, and the temper of the
inhabitants, had once made indispensable, were still continued to the governor. The eleven
remaining dioceses, of Asiana, Pontica, and Thrace; of Macedonia, Dacia, and Pannonia, or
Western Illyricum; of Italy and Africa; of Gaul, Spain, and Britain; were governed by twelve
vicars or vice-prfects, whose name sufficiently explains the nature and dependence of their
office. It may be added, that the lieutenant-generals of the Roman armies, the military counts
and dukes, who will be hereafter mentioned, were allowed the rank and title of Respectable.
As the spirit of jealousy and ostentation prevailed in the councils of the emperors, they
proceeded with anxious diligence to divide the substance and to multiply the titles of power. The
vast countries which the Roman conquerors had united under the same simple form of
administration, were imperceptibly crumbled into minute fragments; till at length the whole
empire was distributed into one hundred and sixteen provinces, each of which supported an
expensive and splendid establishment. Of these, three were governed by proconsuls, thirty-seven
by consulars, five by correctors, and seventy-one by presidents. The appellations of these
magistrates were different; they ranked in successive order, the ensigns of and their situation,
from accidental circumstances, might be more or less agreeable or advantageous. But they were
all (excepting only the pro-consuls) alike included in the class of honorable persons; and they
were alike intrusted, during the pleasure of the prince, and under the authority of the præfects or
their deputies, with the administration of justice and the finances in their respective districts.
The ponderous volumes of the Codes and Pandects would furnish ample materials for a minute
inquiry into the system of provincial government, as in the space of six centuries it was approved
by the wisdom of the Roman statesmen and lawyers. It may be sufficient for the historian to
select two singular and salutary provisions, intended to restrain the abuse of authority. 1. For the
preservation of peace and order, the governors of the provinces were armed with the sword of
justice. They inflicted corporal punishments, and they exercised, in capital offences, the power
of life and death. But they were not authorized to indulge the condemned criminal with the
choice of his own execution, or to pronounce a sentence of the mildest and most honorable kind
of exile. These prerogatives were reserved to the præfects, who alone could impose the heavy
fine of fifty pounds of gold: their vicegerents were confined to the trifling weight of a few
ounces. This distinction, which seems to grant the larger, while it denies the smaller degree of
authority, was founded on a very rational motive. The smaller degree was infinitely more liable
to abuse. The passions of a provincial magistrate might frequently provoke him into acts of
oppression, which affected only the freedom or the fortunes of the subject; though, from a
principle of prudence, perhaps of humanity, he might still be terrified by the guilt of innocent
blood. It may likewise be considered, that exile, considerable fines, or the choice of an easy
death, relate more particularly to the rich and the noble; and the persons the most exposed to the
avarice or resentment of a provincial magistrate, were thus removed from his obscure
persecution to the more august and impartial tribunal of the Prætorian præfect. 2. As it was
reasonably apprehended that the integrity of the judge might be biased, if his interest was
concerned, or his affections were engaged, the strictest regulations were established, to exclude
any person, without the special dispensation of the emperor, from the government of the
province where he was born; and to prohibit the governor or his son from contracting marriage
with a native, or an inhabitant; or from purchasing slaves, lands, or houses, within the extent of
his jurisdiction. Notwithstanding these rigorous precautions, the emperor Constantine, after a
reign of twenty-five years, still deplores the venal and oppressive administration of justice, and
expresses the warmest indignation that the audience of the judge, his despatch of business, his
seasonable delays, and his final sentence, were publicly sold, either by himself or by the officers
of his court. The continuance, and perhaps the impunity, of these crimes, is attested by the
repetition of impotent laws and ineffectual menaces.
All the civil magistrates were drawn from the profession of the law. The celebrated Institutes of
Justinian are addressed to the youth of his dominions, who had devoted themselves to the study
of Roman jurisprudence; and the sovereign condescends to animate their diligence, by the
assurance that their skill and ability would in time be rewarded by an adequate share in the
government of the republic. The rudiments of this lucrative science were taught in all the
considerable cities of the east and west; but the most famous school was that of Berytus, on the
coast of Phnicia; which flourished above three centuries from the time of Alexander Severus, the
author perhaps of an institution so advantageous to his native country. After a regular course of
education, which lasted five years, the students dispersed themselves through the provinces, in
search of fortune and honors; nor could they want an inexhaustible supply of business great
empire, already corrupted by the multiplicity of laws, of arts, and of vices. The court of the
Prætorian præfect of the east could alone furnish employment for one hundred and fifty
advocates, sixty-four of whom were distinguished by peculiar privileges, and two were annually
chosen, with a salary of sixty pounds of gold, to defend the causes of the treasury. The first
experiment was made of their judicial talents, by appointing them to act occasionally as
assessors to the magistrates; from thence they were often raised to preside in the tribunals before
which they had pleaded. They obtained the government of a province; and, by the aid of merit,
of reputation, or of favor, they ascended, by successive steps, to the illustrious dignities of the
state. In the practice of the bar, these men had considered reason as the instrument of dispute;
they interpreted the laws according to the dictates of private interest and the same pernicious
habits might still adhere to their characters in the public administration of the state. The honor of
a liberal profession has indeed been vindicated by ancient and modern advocates, who have
filled the most important stations, with pure integrity and consummate wisdom: but in the
decline of Roman jurisprudence, the ordinary promotion of lawyers was pregnant with mischief
and disgrace. The noble art, which had once been preserved as the sacred inheritance of the
patricians, was fallen into the hands of freedmen and plebeians, who, with cunning rather than
with skill, exercised a sordid and pernicious trade. Some of them procured admittance into
families for the purpose of fomenting differences, of encouraging suits, and of preparing a
harvest of gain for themselves or their brethren. Others, recluse in their chambers, maintained
the dignity of legal professors, by furnishing a rich client with subtleties to confound the plainest
truths, and with arguments to color the most unjustifiable pretensions. The splendid and popular
class was composed of the advocates, who filled the Forum with the sound of their turgid and
loquacious rhetoric. Careless of fame and of justice, they are described, for the most part, as
ignorant and rapacious guides, who conducted their clients through a maze of expense, of delay,
and of disappointment; from whence, after a tedious series of years, they were at length
dismissed, when their patience and fortune were almost exhausted.
III. In the system of policy introduced by Augustus, the governors, those at least of the Imperial
provinces, were invested with the full powers of the sovereign himself. Ministers of peace and
war, the distribution of rewards and punishments depended on them alone, and they successively
appeared on their tribunal in the robes of civil magistracy, and in complete armor at the head of
the Roman legions. The influence of the revenue, the authority of law, and the command of a
military force, concurred to render their power supreme and absolute; and whenever they were
tempted to violate their allegiance, the loyal province which they involved in their rebellion was
scarcely sensible of any change in its political state. From the time of Commodus to the reign of
Constantine, near one hundred governors might be enumerated, who, with various success,
erected the standard of revolt; and though the innocent were too often sacrificed, the guilty
might be sometimes prevented, by the suspicious cruelty of their master. To secure his throne
and the public tranquillity from these formidable servants, Constantine resolved to divide the
military from the civil administration, and to establish, as a permanent and professional
distinction, a practice which had been adopted only as an occasional expedient. The supreme
jurisdiction exercised by the Prætorian præfects over the armies of the empire, was transferred to
the two masters-general whom he instituted, the one for the cavalry, the other for the infantry;
and though each of these illustrious officers was more peculiarly responsible for the discipline
of those troops which were under his immediate inspection, they both indifferently commanded
in the field the several bodies, whether of horse or foot, which were united in the same army.
Their number was soon doubled by the division of the east and west; and as separate generals of
the same rank and title were appointed on the four important frontiers of the Rhine, of the Upper
and the Lower Danube, and of the Euphrates, the defence of the Roman empire was at length
committed to eight masters-general of the cavalry and infantry. Under their orders, thirty-five
military commanders were stationed in the provinces: three in Britain, six in Gaul, one in Spain,
one in Italy, five on the Upper, and four on the Lower Danube; in Asia, eight, three in Egypt, and
four in Africa. The titles of counts, and dukes, by which they were properly distinguished, have
obtained in modern languages so very different a sense, that the use of them may occasion some
surprise. But it should be recollected, that the second of those appellations is only a corruption
of the Latin word, which was indiscriminately applied to any military chief. All these provincial
generals were therefore dukes; but no more than ten among them were dignified with the rank of
counts or companions, a title of honor, or rather of favor, which had been recently invented in
the court of Constantine. A gold belt was the ensign which distinguished the office of the counts
and dukes; and besides their pay, they received a liberal allowance sufficient to maintain one
hundred and ninety servants, and one hundred and fifty-eight horses. They were strictly
prohibited from interfering in any matter which related to the administration of justice or the
revenue; but the command which they exercised over the troops of their department, was
independent of the authority of the magistrates. About the same time that Constantine gave a
legal sanction to the ecclesiastical order, he instituted in the Roman empire the nice balance of
the civil and the military powers. The emulation, and sometimes the discord, which reigned
between two professions of opposite interests and incompatible manners, was productive of
beneficial and of pernicious consequences. It was seldom to be expected that the general and the
civil governor of a province should either conspire for the disturbance, or should unite for the
service, of their country. While the one delayed to offer the assistance which the other disdained
to solicit, the troops very frequently remained without orders or without supplies; the public
safety was betrayed, and the defenceless subjects were left exposed to the fury of the Barbarians.
The divided administration which had been formed by Constantine, relaxed the vigor of the
state, while it secured the tranquillity of the monarch.
The memory of Constantine has been deservedly censured for another innovation, which
corrupted military discipline and prepared the ruin of the empire. The nineteen years which
preceded his final victory over Licinius, had been a period of license and intestine war. The
rivals who contended for the possession of the Roman world, had withdrawn the greatest part of
their forces from the guard of the general frontier; and the principal cities which formed the
boundary of their respective dominions were filled with soldiers, who considered their
countrymen as their most implacable enemies. After the use of these internal garrisons had
ceased with the civil war, the conqueror wanted either wisdom or firmness to revive the severe
discipline of Diocletian, and to suppress a fatal indulgence, which habit had endeared and almost
confirmed to the military order. From the reign of Constantine, a popular and even legal
distinction was admitted between the Palatines and the Borderers; the troops of the court, as
they were improperly styled, and the troops of the frontier. The former, elevated by the
superiority of their pay and privileges, were permitted, except in the extraordinary emergencies
of war, to occupy their tranquil stations in the heart of the provinces. The most flourishing cities
were oppressed by the intolerable weight of quarters. The soldiers insensibly forgot the virtues of
their profession, and contracted only the vices of civil life. They were either degraded by the
industry of mechanic trades, or enervated by the luxury of baths and theatres. They soon became
careless of their martial exercises, curious in their diet and apparel; and while they inspired
terror to the subjects of the empire, they trembled at the hostile approach of the Barbarians. The
chain of fortifications which Diocletian and his colleagues had extended along the banks of the
great rivers, was no longer maintained with the same care, or defended with the same vigilance.
The numbers which still remained under the name of the troops of the frontier, might be
sufficient for the ordinary defence; but their spirit was degraded by the humiliating reflection,
that they who were exposed to the hardships and dangers of a perpetual warfare, were rewarded
only with about two thirds of the pay and emoluments which were lavished on the troops of the
court. Even the bands or legions that were raised the nearest to the level of those unworthy
favorites, were in some measure disgraced by the title of honor which they were allowed to
assume. It was in vain that Constantine repeated the most dreadful menaces of fire and sword
against the Borderers who should dare desert their colors, to connive at the inroads of the
Barbarians, or to participate in the spoil. The mischiefs which flow from injudicious counsels
are seldom removed by the application of partial severities; and though succeeding princes
labored to restore the strength and numbers of the frontier garrisons, the empire, till the last
moment of its dissolution, continued to languish under the mortal wound which had been so
rashly or so weakly inflicted by the hand of Constantine.
The same timid policy, of dividing whatever is united, of reducing whatever is eminent, of
dreading every active power, and of expecting that the most feeble will prove the most obedient,
seems to pervade the institutions of several princes, and particularly those of Constantine. The
martial pride of the legions, whose victorious camps had so often been the scene of rebellion,
was nourished by the memory of their past exploits, and the consciousness of their actual
strength. As long as they maintained their ancient establishment of six thousand men, they
subsisted, under the reign of Diocletian, each of them singly, a visible and important object in
the military history of the Roman empire. A few years afterwards, these gigantic bodies were
shrunk to a very diminutive size; and when seven legions, with some auxiliaries, defended the
city of Amida against the Persians, the total garrison, with the inhabitants of both sexes, and the
peasants of the deserted country, did not exceed the number of twenty thousand persons. From
this fact, and from similar examples, there is reason to believe, that the constitution of the
legionary troops, to which they partly owed their valor and discipline, was dissolved by
Constantine; and that the bands of Roman infantry, which still assumed the same names and the
same honors, consisted only of one thousand or fifteen hundred men. The conspiracy of so many
separate detachments, each of which was awed by the sense of its own weakness, could easily be
checked; and the successors of Constantine might indulge their love of ostentation, by issuing
their orders to one hundred and thirty-two legions, inscribed on the muster-roll of their numerous
armies. The remainder of their troops was distributed into several hundred cohorts of infantry,
and squadrons of cavalry. Their arms, and titles, and ensigns, were calculated to inspire terror,
and to display the variety of nations who marched under the Imperial standard. And not a vestige
was left of that severe simplicity, which, in the ages of freedom and victory, had distinguished
the line of battle of a Roman army from the confused host of an Asiatic monarch. A more
particular enumeration, drawn from the Notitia, might exercise the diligence of an antiquary; but
the historian will content himself with observing, that the number of permanent stations or
garrisons established on the frontiers of the empire, amounted to five hundred and eighty-three;
and that, under the successors of Constantine, the complete force of the military establishment
was computed at six hundred and forty-five thousand soldiers. An effort so prodigious surpassed
the wants of a more ancient, and the faculties of a later, period.
In the various states of society, armies are recruited from very different motives. Barbarians are
urged by the love of war; the citizens of a free republic may be prompted by a principle of duty;
the subjects, or at least the nobles, of a monarchy, are animated by a sentiment of honor; but the
timid and luxurious inhabitants of a declining empire must be allured into the service by the
hopes of profit, or compelled by the dread of punishment. The resources of the Roman treasury
were exhausted by the increase of pay, by the repetition of donatives, and by the invention of
new emolument and indulgences, which, in the opinion of the provincial youth might
compensate the hardships and dangers of a military life. Yet, although the stature was lowered,
although slaves, least by a tacit connivance, were indiscriminately received into the ranks, the
insurmountable difficulty of procuring a regular and adequate supply of volunteers, obliged the
emperors to adopt more effectual and coercive methods. The lands bestowed on the veterans, as
the free reward of their valor were henceforward granted under a condition which contain the
first rudiments of the feudal tenures; that their sons, who succeeded to the inheritance, should
devote themselves to the profession of arms, as soon as they attained the age of manhood; and
their cowardly refusal was punished by the lose of honor, of fortune, or even of life. But as the
annual growth of the sons of the veterans bore a very small proportion to the demands of the
service, levies of men were frequently required from the provinces, and every proprietor was
obliged either to take up arms, or to procure a substitute, or to purchase his exemption by the
payment of a heavy fine. The sum of forty-two pieces of gold, to which it was reduced,
ascertains the exorbitant price of volunteers, and the reluctance with which the government
admitted of this alterative. Such was the horror for the profession of a soldier, which had
affected the minds of the degenerate Romans, that many of the youth of Italy and the provinces
chose to cut off the fingers of their right hand, to escape from being pressed into the service; and
this strange expedient was so commonly practised, as to deserve the severe animadversion of the
laws, and a peculiar name in the Latin language.
Chapter XVII: Foundation Of Constantinople. -- Part V.
The introduction of Barbarians into the Roman armies became every day more universal, more
necessary, and more fatal. The most daring of the Scythians, of the Goths, and of the Germans,
who delighted in war, and who found it more profitable to defend than to ravage the provinces,
were enrolled, not only in the auxiliaries of their respective nations, but in the legions
themselves, and among the most distinguished of the Palatine troops. As they freely mingled
with the subjects of the empire, they gradually learned to despise their manners, and to imitate
their arts. They abjured the implicit reverence which the pride of Rome had exacted from their
ignorance, while they acquired the knowledge and possession of those advantages by which
alone she supported her declining greatness. The Barbarian soldiers, who displayed any military
talents, were advanced, without exception, to the most important commands; and the names of
the tribunes, of the counts and dukes, and of the generals themselves, betray a foreign origin,
which they no longer condescended to disguise. They were often intrusted with the conduct of a
war against their countrymen; and though most of them preferred the ties of allegiance to those
of blood, they did not always avoid the guilt, or at least the suspicion, of holding a treasonable
correspondence with the enemy, of inviting his invasion, or of sparing his retreat. The camps and
the palace of the son of Constantine were governed by the powerful faction of the Franks, who
preserved the strictest connection with each other, and with their country, and who resented
every personal affront as a national indignity. When the tyrant Caligula was suspected of an
intention to invest a very extraordinary candidate with the consular robes, the sacrilegious
profanation would have scarcely excited less astonishment, if, instead of a horse, the noblest
chieftain of Germany or Britain had been the object of his choice. The revolution of three
centuries had produced so remarkable a change in the prejudices of the people, that, with the
public approbation, Constantine showed his successors the example of bestowing the honors of
the consulship on the Barbarians, who, by their merit and services, had deserved to be ranked
among the first of the Romans. But as these hardy veterans, who had been educated in the
ignorance or contempt of the laws, were incapable of exercising any civil offices, the powers of
the human mind were contracted by the irreconcilable separation of talents as well as of
professions. The accomplished citizens of the Greek and Roman republics, whose characters
could adapt themselves to the bar, the senate, the camp, or the schools, had learned to write, to
speak, and to act with the same spirit, and with equal abilities.
IV. Besides the magistrates and generals, who at a distance from the court diffused their
delegated authority over the provinces and armies, the emperor conferred the rank of
Illustriouson seven of his more immediate servants, to whose fidelity he intrusted his safety, or
his counsels, or his treasures. 1. The private apartments of the palace were governed by a
favorite eunuch, who, in the language of that age, was styled the prpositus, or præfect of the
sacred bed-chamber. His duty was to attend the emperor in his hours of state, or in those of
amusement, and to perform about his person all those menial services, which can only derive
their splendor from the influence of royalty. Under a prince who deserved to reign, the great
chamberlain (for such we may call him) was a useful and humble domestic; but an artful
domestic, who improves every occasion of unguarded confidence, will insensibly acquire over a
feeble mind that ascendant which harsh wisdom and uncomplying virtue can seldom obtain. The
degenerate grandsons of Theodosius, who were invisible to their subjects, and contemptible to
their enemies, exalted the præfects of their bed-chamber above the heads of all the ministers of
the palace; and even his deputy, the first of the splendid train of slaves who waited in the
presence, was thought worthy to rank before the respectable proconsuls of Greece or Asia. The
jurisdiction of the chamberlain was acknowledged by the counts, or superintendents, who
regulated the two important provinces of the magnificence of the wardrobe, and of the luxury of
the Imperial table. 2. The principal administration of public affairs was committed to the
diligence and abilities of the master of the offices. He was the supreme magistrate of the
palace, inspected the discipline of the civil and military schools, and received appeals from all
parts of the empire, in the causes which related to that numerous army of privileged persons,
who, as the servants of the court, had obtained for themselves and families a right to decline the
authority of the ordinary judges. The correspondence between the prince and his subjects was
managed by the four scrinia, or offices of this minister of state. The first was appropriated to
memorials, the second to epistles, the third to petitions, and the fourth to papers and orders of a
miscellaneous kind. Each of these was directed by an inferior master of respectable dignity, and
the whole business was despatched by a hundred and forty-eight secretaries, chosen for the most
part from the profession of the law, on account of the variety of abstracts of reports and
references which frequently occurred in the exercise of their several functions. From a
condescension, which in former ages would have been esteemed unworthy the Roman majesty, a
particular secretary was allowed for the Greek language; and interpreters were appointed to
receive the ambassadors of the Barbarians; but the department of foreign affairs, which
constitutes so essential a part of modern policy, seldom diverted the attention of the master of
the offices. His mind was more seriously engaged by the general direction of the posts and
arsenals of the empire. There were thirty-four cities, fifteen in the East, and nineteen in the
West, in which regular companies of workmen were perpetually employed in fabricating
defensive armor, offensive weapons of all sorts, and military engines, which were deposited in
the arsenals, and occasionally delivered for the service of the troops. 3. In the course of nine
centuries, the office of quæstor had experienced a very singular revolution. In the infancy of
Rome, two inferior magistrates were annually elected by the people, to relieve the consuls from
the invidious management of the public treasure; a similar assistant was granted to every
proconsul, and to every prætor, who exercised a military or provincial command; with the extent
of conquest, the two quæstors were gradually multiplied to the number of four, of eight, of
twenty, and, for a short time, perhaps, of forty; and the noblest citizens ambitiously solicited an
office which gave them a seat in the senate, and a just hope of obtaining the honors of the
republic. Whilst Augustus affected to maintain the freedom of election, he consented to accept
the annual privilege of recommending, or rather indeed of nominating, a certain proportion of
candidates; and it was his custom to select one of these distinguished youths, to read his orations
or epistles in the assemblies of the senate. The practice of Augustus was imitated by succeeding
princes; the occasional commission was established as a permanent office; and the favored
quæstor, assuming a new and more illustrious character, alone survived the suppression of his
ancient and useless colleagues. As the orations which he composed in the name of the emperor,
acquired the force, and, at length, the form, of absolute edicts, he was considered as the
representative of the legislative power, the oracle of the council, and the original source of the
civil jurisprudence. He was sometimes invited to take his seat in the supreme judicature of the
Imperial consistory, with the Prætorian præfects, and the master of the offices; and he was
frequently requested to resolve the doubts of inferior judges: but as he was not oppressed with a
variety of subordinate business, his leisure and talents were employed to cultivate that dignified
style of eloquence, which, in the corruption of taste and language, still preserves the majesty of
the Roman laws. In some respects, the office of the Imperial quæstor may be compared with
that of a modern chancellor; but the use of a great seal, which seems to have been adopted by the
illiterate barbarians, was never introduced to attest the public acts of the emperors. 4. The
extraordinary title of count of the sacred largesses was bestowed on the treasurer-general of the
revenue, with the intention perhaps of inculcating, that every payment flowed from the voluntary
bounty of the monarch. To conceive the almost infinite detail of the annual and daily expense of
the civil and military administration in every part of a great empire, would exceed the powers of
the most vigorous imagination. The actual account employed several hundred persons,
distributed into eleven different offices, which were artfully contrived to examine and control
their respective operations. The multitude of these agents had a natural tendency to increase; and
it was more than once thought expedient to dismiss to their native homes the useless
supernumeraries, who, deserting their honest labors, had pressed with too much eagerness into
the lucrative profession of the finances. Twenty-nine provincial receivers, of whom eighteen
were honored with the title of count, corresponded with the treasurer; and he extended his
jurisdiction over the mines from whence the precious metals were extracted, over the mints, in
which they were converted into the current coin, and over the public treasuries of the most
important cities, where they were deposited for the service of the state. The foreign trade of the
empire was regulated by this minister, who directed likewise all the linen and woollen
manufactures, in which the successive operations of spinning, weaving, and dyeing were
executed, chiefly by women of a servile condition, for the use of the palace and army.
Twenty-six of these institutions are enumerated in the West, where the arts had been more
recently introduced, and a still larger proportion may be allowed for the industrious provinces of
the East. 5. Besides the public revenue, which an absolute monarch might levy and expend
according to his pleasure, the emperors, in the capacity of opulent citizens, possessed a very
extensive property, which was administered by the count or treasurer of the private estate. Some
part had perhaps been the ancient demesnes of kings and republics; some accessions might be
derived from the families which were successively invested with the purple; but the most
considerable portion flowed from the impure source of confiscations and forfeitures. The
Imperial estates were scattered through the provinces, from Mauritania to Britain; but the rich
and fertile soil of Cappadocia tempted the monarch to acquire in that country his fairest
possessions, and either Constantine or his successors embraced the occasion of justifying
avarice by religious zeal. They suppressed the rich temple of Comana, where the high priest of
the goddess of war supported the dignity of a sovereign prince; and they applied to their private
use the consecrated lands, which were inhabited by six thousand subjects or slaves of the deity
and her ministers. But these were not the valuable inhabitants: the plains that stretch from the
foot of Mount Argæus to the banks of the Sarus, bred a generous race of horses, renowned above
all others in the ancient world for their majestic shape and incomparable swiftness. These sacred
animals, destined for the service of the palace and the Imperial games, were protected by the
laws from the profanation of a vulgar master. The demesnes of Cappadocia were important
enough to require the inspection of a count; officers of an inferior rank were stationed in the
other parts of the empire; and the deputies of the private, as well as those of the public, treasurer
were maintained in the exercise of their independent functions, and encouraged to control the
authority of the provincial magistrates. 6, 7. The chosen bands of cavalry and infantry, which
guarded the person of the emperor, were under the immediate command of the two counts of the
domestics. The whole number consisted of three thousand five hundred men, divided into seven
schools, or troops, of five hundred each; and in the East, this honorable service was almost
entirely appropriated to the Armenians. Whenever, on public ceremonies, they were drawn up in
the courts and porticos of the palace, their lofty stature, silent order, and splendid arms of silver
and gold, displayed a martial pomp not unworthy of the Roman majesty. From the seven schools
two companies of horse and foot were selected, of the protectors, whose advantageous station
was the hope and reward of the most deserving soldiers. They mounted guard in the interior
apartments, and were occasionally despatched into the provinces, to execute with celerity and
vigor the orders of their master. The counts of the domestics had succeeded to the office of the
Prætorian præfects; like the præfects, they aspired from the service of the palace to the
command of armies.
The perpetual intercourse between the court and the provinces was facilitated by the
construction of roads and the institution of posts. But these beneficial establishments were
accidentally connected with a pernicious and intolerable abuse. Two or three hundred agents or
messengers were employed, under the jurisdiction of the master of the offices, to announce the
names of the annual consuls, and the edicts or victories of the emperors. They insensibly
assumed the license of reporting whatever they could observe of the conduct either of
magistrates or of private citizens; and were soon considered as the eyes of the monarch, and the
scourge of the people. Under the warm influence of a feeble reign, they multiplied to the
incredible number of ten thousand, disdained the mild though frequent admonitions of the laws,
and exercised in the profitable management of the posts a rapacious and insolent oppression.
These official spies, who regularly corresponded with the palace, were encouraged by favor and
reward, anxiously to watch the progress of every treasonable design, from the faint and latent
symptoms of disaffection, to the actual preparation of an open revolt. Their careless or criminal
violation of truth and justice was covered by the consecrated mask of zeal; and they might
securely aim their poisoned arrows at the breast either of the guilty or the innocent, who had
provoked their resentment, or refused to purchase their silence. A faithful subject, of Syria
perhaps, or of Britain, was exposed to the danger, or at least to the dread, of being dragged in
chains to the court of Milan or Constantinople, to defend his life and fortune against the
malicious charge of these privileged informers. The ordinary administration was conducted by
those methods which extreme necessity can alone palliate; and the defects of evidence were
diligently supplied by the use of torture.
The deceitful and dangerous experiment of the criminal quæstion, as it is emphatically styled,
was admitted, rather than approved, in the jurisprudence of the Romans. They applied this
sanguinary mode of examination only to servile bodies, whose sufferings were seldom weighed
by those haughty republicans in the scale of justice or humanity; but they would never consent to
violate the sacred person of a citizen, till they possessed the clearest evidence of his guilt. The
annals of tyranny, from the reign of Tiberius to that of Domitian, circumstantially relate the
executions of many innocent victims; but, as long as the faintest remembrance was kept alive of
the national freedom and honor, the last hours of a Roman were secured from the danger of
ignominious torture. The conduct of the provincial magistrates was not, however, regulated by
the practice of the city, or the strict maxims of the civilians. They found the use of torture
established not only among the slaves of oriental despotism, but among the Macedonians, who
obeyed a limited monarch; among the Rhodians, who flourished by the liberty of commerce; and
even among the sage Athenians, who had asserted and adorned the dignity of human kind. The
acquiescence of the provincials encouraged their governors to acquire, or perhaps to usurp, a
discretionary power of employing the rack, to extort from vagrants or plebeian criminals the
confession of their guilt, till they insensibly proceeded to confound the distinction of rank, and
to disregard the privileges of Roman citizens. The apprehensions of the subjects urged them to
solicit, and the interest of the sovereign engaged him to grant, a variety of special exemptions,
which tacitly allowed, and even authorized, the general use of torture. They protected all persons
of illustrious or honorable rank, bishops and their presbyters, professors of the liberal arts,
soldiers and their families, municipal officers, and their posterity to the third generation, and all
children under the age of puberty. But a fatal maxim was introduced into the new jurisprudence
of the empire, that in the case of treason, which included every offence that the subtlety of
lawyers could derive from a hostile intention towards the prince or republic, all privileges were
suspended, and all conditions were reduced to the same ignominious level. As the safety of the
emperor was avowedly preferred to every consideration of justice or humanity, the dignity of age
and the tenderness of youth were alike exposed to the most cruel tortures; and the terrors of a
malicious information, which might select them as the accomplices, or even as the witnesses,
perhaps, of an imaginary crime, perpetually hung over the heads of the principal citizens of the
Roman world.
These evils, however terrible they may appear, were confined to the smaller number of Roman
subjects, whose dangerous situation was in some degree compensated by the enjoyment of those
advantages, either of nature or of fortune, which exposed them to the jealousy of the monarch.
The obscure millions of a great empire have much less to dread from the cruelty than from the
avarice of their masters, and their humble happiness is principally affected by the grievance of
excessive taxes, which, gently pressing on the wealthy, descend with accelerated weight on the
meaner and more indigent classes of society. An ingenious philosopher has calculated the
universal measure of the public impositions by the degrees of freedom and servitude; and
ventures to assert, that, according to an invariable law of nature, it must always increase with the
former, and diminish in a just proportion to the latter. But this reflection, which would tend to
alleviate the miseries of despotism, is contradicted at least by the history of the Roman empire;
which accuses the same princes of despoiling the senate of its authority, and the provinces of
their wealth. Without abolishing all the various customs and duties on merchandises, which are
imperceptibly discharged by the apparent choice of the purchaser, the policy of Constantine and
his successors preferred a simple and direct mode of taxation, more congenial to the spirit of an
arbitrary government.
Chapter XVII: Foundation Of Constantinople. -- Part VI.
The name and use of the indictions, which serve to ascertain the chronology of the middle ages,
were derived from the regular practice of the Roman tributes. The emperor subscribed with his
own hand, and in purple ink, the solemn edict, or indiction, which was fixed up in the principal
city of each diocese, during two months previous to the first day of September. And by a very
easy connection of ideas, the word indiction was transferred to the measure of tribute which it
prescribed, and to the annual term which it allowed for the payment. This general estimate of the
supplies was proportioned to the real and imaginary wants of the state; but as often as the
expense exceeded the revenue, or the revenue fell short of the computation, an additional tax,
under the name of superindiction, was imposed on the people, and the most valuable attribute of
sovereignty was communicated to the Prætorian præfects, who, on some occasions, were
permitted to provide for the unforeseen and extraordinary exigencies of the public service. The
execution of these laws (which it would be tedious to pursue in their minute and intricate detail)
consisted of two distinct operations: the resolving the general imposition into its constituent
parts, which were assessed on the provinces, the cities, and the individuals of the Roman world;
and the collecting the separate contributions of the individuals, the cities, and the provinces, till
the accumulated sums were poured into the Imperial treasuries. But as the account between the
monarch and the subject was perpetually open, and as the renewal of the demand anticipated the
perfect discharge of the preceding obligation, the weighty machine of the finances was moved by
the same hands round the circle of its yearly revolution. Whatever was honorable or important in
the administration of the revenue, was committed to the wisdom of the præfects, and their
provincial. representatives; the lucrative functions were claimed by a crowd of subordinate
officers, some of whom depended on the treasurer, others on the governor of the province; and
who, in the inevitable conflicts of a perplexed jurisdiction, had frequent opportunities of
disputing with each other the spoils of the people. The laborious offices, which could be
productive only of envy and reproach, of expense and danger, were imposed on the Decurions,
who formed the corporations of the cities, and whom the severity of the Imperial laws had
condemned to sustain the burdens of civil society. The whole landed property of the empire
(without excepting the patrimonial estates of the monarch) was the object of ordinary taxation;
and every new purchaser contracted the obligations of the former proprietor. An accurate census,
or survey, was the only equitable mode of ascertaining the proportion which every citizen should
be obliged to contribute for the public service; and from the well-known period of the indictions,
there is reason to believe that this difficult and expensive operation was repeated at the regular
distance of fifteen years. The lands were measured by surveyors, who were sent into the
provinces; their nature, whether arable or pasture, or vineyards or woods, was distinctly
reported; and an estimate was made of their common value from the average produce of five
years. The numbers of slaves and of cattle constituted an essential part of the report; an oath was
administered to the proprietors, which bound them to disclose the true state of their affairs; and
their attempts to prevaricate, or elude the intention of the legislator, were severely watched, and
punished as a capital crime, which included the double guilt of treason and sacrilege. A large
portion of the tribute was paid in money; and of the current coin of the empire, gold alone could
be legally accepted. The remainder of the taxes, according to the proportions determined by the
annual indiction, was furnished in a manner still more direct, and still more oppressive.
According to the different nature of lands, their real produce in the various articles of wine or
oil, corn or barley, wood or iron, was transported by the labor or at the expense of the
provincials * to the Imperial magazines, from whence they were occasionally distributed for the
use of the court, of the army, and of two capitals, Rome and Constantinople. The commissioners
of the revenue were so frequently obliged to make considerable purchases, that they were strictly
prohibited from allowing any compensation, or from receiving in money the value of those
supplies which were exacted in kind. In the primitive simplicity of small communities, this
method may be well adapted to collect the almost voluntary offerings of the people; but it is at
once susceptible of the utmost latitude, and of the utmost strictness, which in a corrupt and
absolute monarchy must introduce a perpetual contest between the power of oppression and the
arts of fraud. The agriculture of the Roman provinces was insensibly ruined, and, in the progress
of despotism which tends to disappoint its own purpose, the emperors were obliged to derive
some merit from the forgiveness of debts, or the remission of tributes, which their subjects were
utterly incapable of paying. According to the new division of Italy, the fertile and happy
province of Campania, the scene of the early victories and of the delicious retirements of the
citizens of Rome, extended between the sea and the Apennine, from the Tiber to the Silarus.
Within sixty years after the death of Constantine, and on the evidence of an actual survey, an
exemption was granted in favor of three hundred and thirty thousand English acres of desert and
uncultivated land; which amounted to one eighth of the whole surface of the province. As the
footsteps of the Barbarians had not yet been seen in Italy, the cause of this amazing desolation,
which is recorded in the laws, can be ascribed only to the administration of the Roman
emperors.
Either from design or from accident, the mode of assessment seemed to unite the substance of a
land tax with the forms of a capitation. The returns which were sent of every province or
district, expressed the number of tributary subjects, and the amount of the public impositions.
The latter of these sums was divided by the former; and the estimate, that such a province
contained so many capita, or heads of tribute; and that each head was rated at such a price, was
universally received, not only in the popular, but even in the legal computation. The value of a
tributary head must have varied, according to many accidental, or at least fluctuating
circumstances; but some knowledge has been preserved of a very curious fact, the more
important, since it relates to one of the richest provinces of the Roman empire, and which now
flourishes as the most splendid of the European kingdoms. The rapacious ministers of
Constantius had exhausted the wealth of Gaul, by exacting twenty-five pieces of gold for the
annual tribute of every head. The humane policy of his successor reduced the capitation to seven
pieces. A moderate proportion between these opposite extremes of extraordinary oppression and
of transient indulgence, may therefore be fixed at sixteen pieces of gold, or about nine pounds
sterling, the common standard, perhaps, of the impositions of Gaul. But this calculation, or
rather, indeed, the facts from whence it is deduced, cannot fail of suggesting two difficulties to a
thinking mind, who will be at once surprised by the equality, and by the enormity, of the
capitation. An attempt to explain them may perhaps reflect some light on the interesting subject
of the finances of the declining empire.
I. It is obvious, that, as long as the immutable constitution of human nature produces and
maintains so unequal a division of property, the most numerous part of the community would be
deprived of their subsistence, by the equal assessment of a tax from which the sovereign would
derive a very trifling revenue. Such indeed might be the theory of the Roman capitation; but in
the practice, this unjust equality was no longer felt, as the tribute was collected on the principle
of a real, not of a personal imposition. * Several indigent citizens contributed to compose a
single head, or share of taxation; while the wealthy provincial, in proportion to his fortune, alone
represented several of those imaginary beings. In a poetical request, addressed to one of the last
and most deserving of the Roman princes who reigned in Gaul, Sidonius Apollinaris personifies
his tribute under the figure of a triple monster, the Geryon of the Grecian fables, and entreats the
new Hercules that he would most graciously be pleased to save his life by cutting off three of his
heads. The fortune of Sidonius far exceeded the customary wealth of a poet; but if he had
pursued the allusion, he might have painted many of the Gallic nobles with the hundred heads of
the deadly Hydra, spreading over the face of the country, and devouring the substance of a
hundred families. II. The difficulty of allowing an annual sum of about nine pounds sterling,
even for the average of the capitation of Gaul, may be rendered more evident by the comparison
of the present state of the same country, as it is now governed by the absolute monarch of an
industrious, wealthy, and affectionate people. The taxes of France cannot be magnified, either by
fear or by flattery, beyond the annual amount of eighteen millions sterling, which ought perhaps
to be shared among four and twenty millions of inhabitants. Seven millions of these, in the
capacity of fathers, or brothers, or husbands, may discharge the obligations of the remaining
multitude of women and children; yet the equal proportion of each tributary subject will scarcely
rise above fifty shillings of our money, instead of a proportion almost four times as considerable,
which was regularly imposed on their Gallic ancestors. The reason of this difference may be
found, not so much in the relative scarcity or plenty of gold and silver, as in the different state of
society, in ancient Gaul and in modern France. In a country where personal freedom is the
privilege of every subject, the whole mass of taxes, whether they are levied on property or on
consumption, may be fairly divided among the whole body of the nation. But the far greater part
of the lands of ancient Gaul, as well as of the other provinces of the Roman world, were
cultivated by slaves, or by peasants, whose dependent condition was a less rigid servitude. In
such a state the poor were maintained at the expense of the masters who enjoyed the fruits of
their labor; and as the rolls of tribute were filled only with the names of those citizens who
possessed the means of an honorable, or at least of a decent subsistence, the comparative
smallness of their numbers explains and justifies the high rate of their capitation. The truth of
this assertion may be illustrated by the following example: The Ædui, one of the most powerful
and civilized tribes or cities of Gaul, occupied an extent of territory, which now contains about
five hundred thousand inhabitants, in the two ecclesiastical dioceses of Autun and Nevers; and
with the probable accession of those of Chalons and Macon, the population would amount to
eight hundred thousand souls. In the time of Constantine, the territory of the Ædui afforded no
more than twenty-five thousand heads of capitation, of whom seven thousand were discharged
by that prince from the intolerable weight of tribute. A just analogy would seem to countenance
the opinion of an ingenious historian, that the free and tributary citizens did not surpass the
number of half a million; and if, in the ordinary administration of government, their annual
payments may be computed at about four millions and a half of our money, it would appear, that
although the share of each individual was four times as considerable, a fourth part only of the
modern taxes of France was levied on the Imperial province of Gaul. The exactions of
Constantius may be calculated at seven millions sterling, which were reduced to two millions by
the humanity or the wisdom of Julian.
But this tax, or capitation, on the proprietors of land, would have suffered a rich and numerous
class of free citizens to escape. With the view of sharing that species of wealth which is derived
from art or labor, and which exists in money or in merchandise, the emperors imposed a distinct
and personal tribute on the trading part of their subjects. Some exemptions, very strictly
confined both in time and place, were allowed to the proprietors who disposed of the produce of
their own estates. Some indulgence was granted to the profession of the liberal arts: but every
other branch of commercial industry was affected by the severity of the law. The honorable
merchant of Alexandria, who imported the gems and spices of India for the use of the western
world; the usurer, who derived from the interest of money a silent and ignominious profit; the
ingenious manufacturer, the diligent mechanic, and even the most obscure retailer of a
sequestered village, were obliged to admit the officers of the revenue into the partnership of
their gain; and the sovereign of the Roman empire, who tolerated the profession, consented to
share the infamous salary, of public prostitutes. As this general tax upon industry was collected
every fourth year, it was styled the Lustral Contribution: and the historian Zosimus laments that
the approach of the fatal period was announced by the tears and terrors of the citizens, who were
often compelled by the impending scourge to embrace the most abhorred and unnatural methods
of procuring the sum at which their property had been assessed. The testimony of Zosimus
cannot indeed be justified from the charge of passion and prejudice; but, from the nature of this
tribute it seems reasonable to conclude, that it was arbitrary in the distribution, and extremely
rigorous in the mode of collecting. The secret wealth of commerce, and the precarious profits of
art or labor, are susceptible only of a discretionary valuation, which is seldom disadvantageous
to the interest of the treasury; and as the person of the trader supplies the want of a visible and
permanent security, the payment of the imposition, which, in the case of a land tax, may be
obtained by the seizure of property, can rarely be extorted by any other means than those of
corporal punishments. The cruel treatment of the insolvent debtors of the state, is attested, and
was perhaps mitigated by a very humane edict of Constantine, who, disclaiming the use of racks
and of scourges, allots a spacious and airy prison for the place of their confinement.
These general taxes were imposed and levied by the absolute authority of the monarch; but the
occasional offerings of the coronary goldstill retained the name and semblance of popular
consent. It was an ancient custom that the allies of the republic, who ascribed their safety or
deliverance to the success of the Roman arms, and even the cities of Italy, who admired the
virtues of their victorious general, adorned the pomp of his triumph by their voluntary gifts of
crowns of gold, which after the ceremony were consecrated in the temple of Jupiter, to remain a
lasting monument of his glory to future ages. The progress of zeal and flattery soon multiplied
the number, and increased the size, of these popular donations; and the triumph of Cæsar was
enriched with two thousand eight hundred and twenty-two massy crowns, whose weight
amounted to twenty thousand four hundred and fourteen pounds of gold. This treasure was
immediately melted down by the prudent dictator, who was satisfied that it would be more
serviceable to his soldiers than to the gods: his example was imitated by his successors; and the
custom was introduced of exchanging these splendid ornaments for the more acceptable present
of the current gold coin of the empire. The spontaneous offering was at length exacted as the
debt of duty; and instead of being confined to the occasion of a triumph, it was supposed to be
granted by the several cities and provinces of the monarchy, as often as the emperor
condescended to announce his accession, his consulship, the birth of a son, the creation of a
Cæsar, a victory over the Barbarians, or any other real or imaginary event which graced the
annals of his reign. The peculiar free gift of the senate of Rome was fixed by custom at sixteen
hundred pounds of gold, or about sixty-four thousand pounds sterling. The oppressed subjects
celebrated their own felicity, that their sovereign should graciously consent to accept this feeble
but voluntary testimony of their loyalty and gratitude.
A people elated by pride, or soured by discontent, are seldom qualified to form a just estimate of
their actual situation. The subjects of Constantine were incapable of discerning the decline of
genius and manly virtue, which so far degraded them below the dignity of their ancestors; but
they could feel and lament the rage of tyranny, the relaxation of discipline, and the increase of
taxes. The impartial historian, who acknowledges the justice of their complaints, will observe
some favorable circumstances which tended to alleviate the misery of their condition. The
threatening tempest of Barbarians, which so soon subverted the foundations of Roman greatness,
was still repelled, or suspended, on the frontiers. The arts of luxury and literature were
cultivated, and the elegant pleasures of society were enjoyed, by the inhabitants of a
considerable portion of the globe. The forms, the pomp, and the expense of the civil
administration contributed to restrain the irregular license of the soldiers; and although the laws
were violated by power, or perverted by subtlety, the sage principles of the Roman jurisprudence
preserved a sense of order and equity, unknown to the despotic governments of the East. The
rights of mankind might derive some protection from religion and philosophy; and the name of
freedom, which could no longer alarm, might sometimes admonish, the successors of Augustus,
that they did not reign over a nation of Slaves or Barbarians.
Chapter XVIII: Character Of Constantine And His Sons.
Part I.
Character Of Constantine. -- Gothic War. -- Death Of Constantine. -- Division Of The Empire
Among His Three Sons. -- Persian War. -- Tragic Deaths Of Constantine The Younger And
Constans. -- Usurpation Of Magnentius. -- Civil War. -- Victory Of Constantius.
The character of the prince who removed the seat of empire, and introduced such important
changes into the civil and religious constitution of his country, has fixed the attention, and
divided the opinions, of mankind. By the grateful zeal of the Christians, the deliverer of the
church has been decorated with every attribute of a hero, and even of a saint; while the
discontent of the vanquished party has compared Constantine to the most abhorred of those
tyrants, who, by their vice and weakness, dishonored the Imperial purple. The same passions
have in some degree been perpetuated to succeeding generations, and the character of
Constantine is considered, even in the present age, as an object either of satire or of panegyric.
By the impartial union of those defects which are confessed by his warmest admirers, and of
those virtues which are acknowledged by his most-implacable enemies, we might hope to
delineate a just portrait of that extraordinary man, which the truth and candor of history should
adopt without a blush. But it would soon appear, that the vain attempt to blend such discordant
colors, and to reconcile such inconsistent qualities, must produce a figure monstrous rather than
human, unless it is viewed in its proper and distinct lights, by a careful separation of the
different periods of the reign of Constantine.
The person, as well as the mind, of Constantine, had been enriched by nature with her choices
endowments. His stature was lofty, his countenance majestic, his deportment graceful; his
strength and activity were displayed in every manly exercise, and from his earliest youth, to a
very advanced season of life, he preserved the vigor of his constitution by a strict adherence to
the domestic virtues of chastity and temperance. He delighted in the social intercourse of
familiar conversation; and though he might sometimes indulge his disposition to raillery with
less reserve than was required by the severe dignity of his station, the courtesy and liberality of
his manners gained the hearts of all who approached him. The sincerity of his friendship has
been suspected; yet he showed, on some occasions, that he was not incapable of a warm and
lasting attachment. The disadvantage of an illiterate education had not prevented him from
forming a just estimate of the value of learning; and the arts and sciences derived some
encouragement from the munificent protection of Constantine. In the despatch of business, his
diligence was indefatigable; and the active powers of his mind were almost continually
exercised in reading, writing, or meditating, in giving audiences to ambassadors, and in
examining the complaints of his subjects. Even those who censured the propriety of his measures
were compelled to acknowledge, that he possessed magnanimity to conceive, and patience to
execute, the most arduous designs, without being checked either by the prejudices of education,
or by the clamors of the multitude. In the field, he infused his own intrepid spirit into the troops,
whom he conducted with the talents of a consummate general; and to his abilities, rather than to
his fortune, we may ascribe the signal victories which he obtained over the foreign and domestic
foes of the republic. He loved glory as the reward, perhaps as the motive, of his labors. The
boundless ambition, which, from the moment of his accepting the purple at York, appears as the
ruling passion of his soul, may be justified by the dangers of his own situation, by the character
of his rivals, by the consciousness of superior merit, and by the prospect that his success would
enable him to restore peace and order to tot the distracted empire. In his civil wars against
Maxentius and Licinius, he had engaged on his side the inclinations of the people, who
compared the undissembled vices of those tyrants with the spirit of wisdom and justice which
seemed to direct the general tenor of the administration of Constantine.
Had Constantine fallen on the banks of the Tyber, or even in the plains of Hadrianople, such is
the character which, with a few exceptions, he might have transmitted to posterity. But the
conclusion of his reign (according to the moderate and indeed tender sentence of a writer of the
same age) degraded him from the rank which he had acquired among the most deserving of the
Roman princes. In the life of Augustus, we behold the tyrant of the republic, converted, almost
by imperceptible degrees, into the father of his country, and of human kind. In that of
Constantine, we may contemplate a hero, who had so long inspired his subjects with love, and
his enemies with terror, degenerating into a cruel and dissolute monarch, corrupted by his
fortune, or raised by conquest above the necessity of dissimulation. The general peace which he
maintained during the last fourteen years of his reign, was a period of apparent splendor rather
than of real prosperity; and the old age of Constantine was disgraced by the opposite yet
reconcilable vices of rapaciousness and prodigality. The accumulated treasures found in the
palaces of Maxentius and Licinius, were lavishly consumed; the various innovations introduced
by the conqueror, were attended with an increasing expense; the cost of his buildings, his court,
and his festivals, required an immediate and plentiful supply; and the oppression of the people
was the only fund which could support the magnificence of the sovereign. His unworthy
favorites, enriched by the boundless liberality of their master, usurped with impunity the
privilege of rapine and corruption. A secret but universal decay was felt in every part of the
public administration, and the emperor himself, though he still retained the obedience, gradually
lost the esteem, of his subjects. The dress and manners, which, towards the decline of life, he
chose to affect, served only to degrade him in the eyes of mankind. The Asiatic pomp, which had
been adopted by the pride of Diocletian, assumed an air of softness and effeminacy in the person
of Constantine. He is represented with false hair of various colors, laboriously arranged by the
skilful artists to the times; a diadem of a new and more expensive fashion; a profusion of gems
and pearls, of collars and bracelets, and a variegated flowing robe of silk, most curiously
embroidered with flowers of gold. In such apparel, scarcely to be excused by the youth and folly
of Elagabalus, we are at a loss to discover the wisdom of an aged monarch, and the simplicity of
a Roman veteran. A mind thus relaxed by prosperity and indulgence, was incapable of rising to
that magnanimity which disdains suspicion, and dares to forgive. The deaths of Maximian and
Licinius may perhaps be justified by the maxims of policy, as they are taught in the schools of
tyrants; but an impartial narrative of the executions, or rather murders, which sullied the
declining age of Constantine, will suggest to our most candid thoughts the idea of a prince who
could sacrifice without reluctance the laws of justice, and the feelings of nature, to the dictates
either of his passions or of his interest.
The same fortune which so invariably followed the standard of Constantine, seemed to secure
the hopes and comforts of his domestic life. Those among his predecessors who had enjoyed the
longest and most prosperous reigns, Augustus Trajan, and Diocletian, had been disappointed of
posterity; and the frequent revolutions had never allowed sufficient time for any Imperial family
to grow up and multiply under the shade of the purple. But the royalty of the Flavian line, which
had been first ennobled by the Gothic Claudius, descended through several generations; and
Constantine himself derived from his royal father the hereditary honors which he transmitted to
his children. The emperor had been twice married. Minervina, the obscure but lawful object of
his youthful attachment, had left him only one son, who was called Crispus. By Fausta, the
daughter of Maximian, he had three daughters, and three sons known by the kindred names of
Constantine, Constantius, and Constans. The unambitious brothers of the great Constantine,
Julius Constantius, Dalmatius, and Hannibalianus, were permitted to enjoy the most honorable
rank, and the most affluent fortune, that could be consistent with a private station. The youngest
of the three lived without a name, and died without posterity. His two elder brothers obtained in
marriage the daughters of wealthy senators, and propagated new branches of the Imperial race.
Gallus and Julian afterwards became the most illustrious of the children of Julius Constantius,
the Patrician. The two sons of Dalmatius, who had been decorated with the vain title of Censor,
were named Dalmatius and Hannibalianus. The two sisters of the great Constantine, Anastasia
and Eutropia, were bestowed on Optatus and Nepotianus, two senators of noble birth and of
consular dignity. His third sister, Constantia, was distinguished by her preeminence of greatness
and of misery. She remained the widow of the vanquished Licinius; and it was by her entreaties,
that an innocent boy, the offspring of their marriage, preserved, for some time, his life, the title
of Cæsar, and a precarious hope of the succession. Besides the females, and the allies of the
Flavian house, ten or twelve males, to whom the language of modern courts would apply the title
of princes of the blood, seemed, according to the order of their birth, to be destined either to
inherit or to support the throne of Constantine. But in less than thirty years, this numerous and
increasing family was reduced to the persons of Constantius and Julian, who alone had survived
a series of crimes and calamities, such as the tragic poets have deplored in the devoted lines of
Pelops and of Cadmus.
Crispus, the eldest son of Constantine, and the presumptive heir of the empire, is represented by
impartial historians as an amiable and accomplished youth. The care of his education, or at least
of his studies, was intrusted to Lactantius, the most eloquent of the Christians; a preceptor
admirably qualified to form the taste, and the excite the virtues, of his illustrious disciple. At the
age of seventeen, Crispus was invested with the title of Cæsar, and the administration of the
Gallic provinces, where the inroads of the Germans gave him an early occasion of signalizing his
military prowess. In the civil war which broke out soon afterwards, the father and son divided
their powers; and this history has already celebrated the valor as well as conduct displayed by
the latter, in forcing the straits of the Hellespont, so obstinately defended by the superior fleet of
Licinius. This naval victory contributed to determine the event of the war; and the names of
Constantine and of Crispus were united in the joyful acclamations of their eastern subjects; who
loudly proclaimed, that the world had been subdued, and was now governed, by an emperor
endowed with every virtue; and by his illustrious son, a prince beloved of Heaven, and the lively
image of his father's perfections. The public favor, which seldom accompanies old age, diffused
its lustre over the youth of Crispus. He deserved the esteem, and he engaged the affections, of
the court, the army, and the people. The experienced merit of a reigning monarch is
acknowledged by his subjects with reluctance, and frequently denied with partial and
discontented murmurs; while, from the opening virtues of his successor, they fondly conceive
the most unbounded hopes of private as well as public felicity.
This dangerous popularity soon excited the attention of Constantine, who, both as a father and as
a king, was impatient of an equal. Instead of attempting to secure the allegiance of his son by the
generous ties of confidence and gratitude, he resolved to prevent the mischiefs which might be
apprehended from dissatisfied ambition. Crispus soon had reason to complain, that while his
infant brother Constantius was sent, with the title of Cæsar, to reign over his peculiar department
of the Gallic provinces, he, a prince of mature years, who had performed such recent and signal
services, instead of being raised to the superior rank of Augustus, was confined almost a prisoner
to his father's court; and exposed, without power or defence, to every calumny which the malice
of his enemies could suggest. Under such painful circumstances, the royal youth might not
always be able to compose his behavior, or suppress his discontent; and we may be assured, that
he was encompassed by a train of indiscreet or perfidious followers, who assiduously studied to
inflame, and who were perhaps instructed to betray, the unguarded warmth of his resentment. An
edict of Constantine, published about this time, manifestly indicates his real or affected
suspicions, that a secret conspiracy had been formed against his person and government. By all
the allurements of honors and rewards, he invites informers of every degree to accuse without
exception his magistrates or ministers, his friends or his most intimate favorites, protesting, with
a solemn asseveration, that he himself will listen to the charge, that he himself will revenge his
injuries; and concluding with a prayer, which discovers some apprehension of danger, that the
providence of the Supreme Being may still continue to protect the safety of the emperor and of
the empire.
The informers, who complied with so liberal an invitation, were sufficiently versed in the arts of
courts to select the friends and adherents of Crispus as the guilty persons; nor is there any reason
to distrust the veracity of the emperor, who had promised an ample measure of revenge and
punishment. The policy of Constantine maintained, however, the same appearances of regard
and confidence towards a son, whom he began to consider as his most irreconcilable enemy.
Medals were struck with the customary vows for the long and auspicious reign of the young
Cæsar; and as the people, who were not admitted into the secrets of the palace, still loved his
virtues, and respected his dignity, a poet who solicits his recall from exile, adores with equal
devotion the majesty of the father and that of the son. The time was now arrived for celebrating
the august ceremony of the twentieth year of the reign of Constantine; and the emperor, for that
purpose, removed his court from Nicomedia to Rome, where the most splendid preparations had
been made for his reception. Every eye, and every tongue, affected to express their sense of the
general happiness, and the veil of ceremony and dissimulation was drawn for a while over the
darkest designs of revenge and murder. In the midst of the festival, the unfortunate Crispus was
apprehended by order of the emperor, who laid aside the tenderness of a father, without
assuming the equity of a judge. The examination was short and private; and as it was thought
decent to conceal the fate of the young prince from the eyes of the Roman people, he was sent
under a strong guard to Pola, in Istria, where, soon afterwards, he was put to death, either by the
hand of the executioner, or by the more gentle operations of poison. The Cæsar Licinius, a youth
of amiable manners, was involved in the ruin of Crispus: and the stern jealousy of Constantine
was unmoved by the prayers and tears of his favorite sister, pleading for the life of a son, whose
rank was his only crime, and whose loss she did not long survive. The story of these unhappy
princes, the nature and evidence of their guilt, the forms of their trial, and the circumstances of
their death, were buried in mysterious obscurity; and the courtly bishop, who has celebrated in
an elaborate work the virtues and piety of his hero, observes a prudent silence on the subject of
these tragic events. Such haughty contempt for the opinion of mankind, whilst it imprints an
indelible stain on the memory of Constantine, must remind us of the very different behavior of
one of the greatest monarchs of the present age. The Czar Peter, in the full possession of
despotic power, submitted to the judgment of Russia, of Europe, and of posterity, the reasons
which had compelled him to subscribe the condemnation of a criminal, or at least of a
degenerate son.
The innocence of Crispus was so universally acknowledged, that the modern Greeks, who adore
the memory of their founder, are reduced to palliate the guilt of a parricide, which the common
feelings of human nature forbade them to justify. They pretend, that as soon as the afflicted
father discovered the falsehood of the accusation by which his credulity had been so fatally
misled, he published to the world his repentance and remorse; that he mourned forty days,
during which he abstained from the use of the bath, and all the ordinary comforts of life; and
that, for the lasting instruction of posterity, he erected a golden statue of Crispus, with this
memorable inscription: To my son, whom I unjustly condemned. A tale so moral and so
interesting would deserve to be supported by less exceptionable authority; but if we consult the
more ancient and authentic writers, they will inform us, that the repentance of Constantine was
manifested only in acts of blood and revenge; and that he atoned for the murder of an innocent
son, by the execution, perhaps, of a guilty wife. They ascribe the misfortunes of Crispus to the
arts of his step-mother Fausta, whose implacable hatred, or whose disappointed love, renewed in
the palace of Constantine the ancient tragedy of Hippolitus and of Phædra. Like the daughter of
Minos, the daughter of Maximian accused her son-in-law of an incestuous attempt on the
chastity of his father's wife; and easily obtained, from the jealousy of the emperor, a sentence of
death against a young prince, whom she considered with reason as the most formidable rival of
her own children. But Helena, the aged mother of Constantine, lamented and revenged the
untimely fate of her grandson Crispus; nor was it long before a real or pretended discovery was
made, that Fausta herself entertained a criminal connection with a slave belonging to the
Imperial stables. Her condemnation and punishment were the instant consequences of the
charge; and the adulteress was suffocated by the steam of a bath, which, for that purpose, had
been heated to an extraordinary degree. By some it will perhaps be thought, that the
remembrance of a conjugal union of twenty years, and the honor of their common offspring, the
destined heirs of the throne, might have softened the obdurate heart of Constantine, and
persuaded him to suffer his wife, however guilty she might appear, to expiate her offences in a
solitary prison. But it seems a superfluous labor to weigh the propriety, unless we could
ascertain the truth, of this singular event, which is attended with some circumstances of doubt
and perplexity. Those who have attacked, and those who have defended, the character of
Constantine, have alike disregarded two very remarkable passages of two orations pronounced
under the succeeding reign. The former celebrates the virtues, the beauty, and the fortune of the
empress Fausta, the daughter, wife, sister, and mother of so many princes. The latter asserts, in
explicit terms, that the mother of the younger Constantine, who was slain three years after his
father's death, survived to weep over the fate of her son. Notwithstanding the positive testimony
of several writers of the Pagan as well as of the Christian religion, there may still remain some
reason to believe, or at least to suspect, that Fausta escaped the blind and suspicious cruelty of
her husband. * The deaths of a son and a nephew, with the execution of a great number of
respectable, and perhaps innocent friends, who were involved in their fall, may be sufficient,
however, to justify the discontent of the Roman people, and to explain the satirical verses
affixed to the palace gate, comparing the splendid and bloody reigns of Constantine and Nero.
Chapter XVIII: Character Of Constantine And His Sons. -- Part II.
By the death of Crispus, the inheritance of the empire seemed to devolve on the three sons of
Fausta, who have been already mentioned under the names of Constantine, of Constantius, and
of Constans. These young princes were successively invested with the title of Cæsar; and the
dates of their promotion may be referred to the tenth, the twentieth, and the thirtieth years of the
reign of their father. This conduct, though it tended to multiply the future masters of the Roman
world, might be excused by the partiality of paternal affection; but it is not so easy to understand
the motives of the emperor, when he endangered the safety both of his family and of his people,
by the unnecessary elevation of his two nephews, Dalmatius and Hannibalianus. The former was
raised, by the title of Cæsar, to an equality with his cousins. In favor of the latter, Constantine
invented the new and singular appellation of Nobilissimus; to which he annexed the flattering
distinction of a robe of purple and gold. But of the whole series of Roman princes in any age of
the empire, Hannibalianus alone was distinguished by the title of King; a name which the
subjects of Tiberius would have detested, as the profane and cruel insult of capricious tyranny.
The use of such a title, even as it appears under the reign of Constantine, is a strange and
unconnected fact, which can scarcely be admitted on the joint authority of Imperial medals and
contemporary writers.
The whole empire was deeply interested in the education of these five youths, the acknowledged
successors of Constantine. The exercise of the body prepared them for the fatigues of war and
the duties of active life. Those who occasionally mention the education or talents of Constantius,
allow that he excelled in the gymnastic arts of leaping and running that he was a dexterous
archer, a skilful horseman, and a master of all the different weapons used in the service either of
the cavalry or of the infantry. The same assiduous cultivation was bestowed, though not perhaps
with equal success, to improve the minds of the sons and nephews of Constantine. The most
celebrated professors of the Christian faith, of the Grecian philosophy, and of the Roman
jurisprudence, were invited by the liberality of the emperor, who reserved for himself the
important task of instructing the royal youths in the science of government, and the knowledge
of mankind. But the genius of Constantine himself had been formed by adversity and experience.
In the free intercourse of private life, and amidst the dangers of the court of Galerius, he had
learned to command his own passions, to encounter those of his equals, and to depend for his
present safety and future greatness on the prudence and firmness of his personal conduct. His
destined successors had the misfortune of being born and educated in the imperial purple.
Incessantly surrounded with a train of flatterers, they passed their youth in the enjoyment of
luxury, and the expectation of a throne; nor would the dignity of their rank permit them to
descend from that elevated station from whence the various characters of human nature appear
to wear a smooth and uniform aspect. The indulgence of Constantine admitted them, at a very
tender age, to share the administration of the empire; and they studied the art of reigning, at the
expense of the people intrusted to their care. The younger Constantine was appointed to hold his
court in Gaul; and his brother Constantius exchanged that department, the ancient patrimony of
their father, for the more opulent, but less martial, countries of the East. Italy, the Western
Illyricum, and Africa, were accustomed to revere Constans, the third of his sons, as the
representative of the great Constantine. He fixed Dalmatius on the Gothic frontier, to which he
annexed the government of Thrace, Macedonia, and Greece. The city of Cæsarea was chosen for
the residence of Hannibalianus; and the provinces of Pontus, Cappadocia, and the Lesser
Armenia, were destined to form the extent of his new kingdom. For each of these princes a
suitable establishment was provided. A just proportion of guards, of legions, and of auxiliaries,
was allotted for their respective dignity and defence. The ministers and generals, who were
placed about their persons, were such as Constantine could trust to assist, and even to control,
these youthful sovereigns in the exercise of their delegated power. As they advanced in years and
experience, the limits of their authority were insensibly enlarged: but the emperor always
reserved for himself the title of Augustus; and while he showed the Cæsars to the armies and
provinces, he maintained every part of the empire in equal obedience to its supreme head. The
tranquillity of the last fourteen years of his reign was scarcely interrupted by the contemptible
insurrection of a camel-driver in the Island of Cyprus, or by the active part which the policy of
Constantine engaged him to assume in the wars of the Goths and Sarmatians.
Among the different branches of the human race, the Sarmatians form a very remarkable shade;
as they seem to unite the manners of the Asiatic barbarians with the figure and complexion of
the ancient inhabitants of Europe. According to the various accidents of peace and war, of
alliance or conquest, the Sarmatians were sometimes confined to the banks of the Tanais; and
they sometimes spread themselves over the immense plains which lie between the Vistula and
the Volga. The care of their numerous flocks and herds, the pursuit of game, and the exercises
of war, or rather of rapine, directed the vagrant motions of the Sarmatians. The movable camps
or cities, the ordinary residence of their wives and children, consisted only of large wagons
drawn by oxen, and covered in the form of tents. The military strength of the nation was
composed of cavalry; and the custom of their warriors, to lead in their hand one or two spare
horses, enabled them to advance and to retreat with a rapid diligence, which surprised the
security, and eluded the pursuit, of a distant enemy. Their poverty of iron prompted their rude
industry to invent a sort of cuirass, which was capable of resisting a sword or javelin, though it
was formed only of horses' hoofs, cut into thin and polished slices, carefully laid over each other
in the manner of scales or feathers, and strongly sewed upon an under garment of coarse linen.
The offensive arms of the Sarmatians were short daggers, long lances, and a weighty bow vow
with a quiver of arrows. They were reduced to the necessity of employing fish-bones for the
points of their weapons; but the custom of dipping them in a venomous liquor, that poisoned the
wounds which they inflicted, is alone sufficient to prove the most savage manners, since a
people impressed with a sense of humanity would have abhorred so cruel a practice, and a nation
skilled in the arts of war would have disdained so impotent a resource. Whenever these
Barbarians issued from their deserts in quest of prey, their shaggy beards, uncombed locks, the
furs with which they were covered from head to foot, and their fierce countenances, which
seemed to express the innate cruelty of their minds, inspired the more civilized provincials of
Rome with horror and dismay.
The tender Ovid, after a youth spent in the enjoyment of fame and luxury, was condemned to a
hopeless exile on the frozen banks of the Danube, where he was exposed, almost without
defence, to the fury of these monsters of the desert, with whose stern spirits he feared that his
gentle shade might hereafter be confounded. In his pathetic, but sometimes unmanly
lamentations, he describes in the most lively colors the dress and manners, the arms and
inroads, of the Getæ and Sarmatians, who were associated for the purposes of destruction; and
from the accounts of history there is some reason to believe that these Sarmatians were the
Jazygæ, one of the most numerous and warlike tribes of the nation. The allurements of plenty
engaged them to seek a permanent establishment on the frontiers of the empire. Soon after the
reign of Augustus, they obliged the Dacians, who subsisted by fishing on the banks of the River
Teyss or Tibiscus, to retire into the hilly country, and to abandon to the victorious Sarmatians the
fertile plains of the Upper Hungary, which are bounded by the course of the Danube and the
semicircular enclosure of the Carpathian Mountains. In this advantageous position, they
watched or suspended the moment of attack, as they were provoked by injuries or appeased by
presents; they gradually acquired the skill of using more dangerous weapons, and although the
Sarmatians did not illustrate their name by any memorable exploits, they occasionally assisted
their eastern and western neighbors, the Goths and the Germans, with a formidable body of
cavalry. They lived under the irregular aristocracy of their chieftains: but after they had received
into their bosom the fugitive Vandals, who yielded to the pressure of the Gothic power, they
seem to have chosen a king from that nation, and from the illustrious race of the Astingi, who
had formerly dwelt on the shores of the northern ocean.
This motive of enmity must have inflamed the subjects of contention, which perpetually arise on
the confines of warlike and independent nations. The Vandal princes were stimulated by fear
and revenge; the Gothic kings aspired to extend their dominion from the Euxine to the frontiers
of Germany; and the waters of the Maros, a small river which falls into the Teyss, were stained
with the blood of the contending Barbarians. After some experience of the superior strength and
numbers of their adversaries, the Sarmatians implored the protection of the Roman monarch,
who beheld with pleasure the discord of the nations, but who was justly alarmed by the progress
of the Gothic arms. As soon as Constantine had declared himself in favor of the weaker party,
the haughty Araric, king of the Goths, instead of expecting the attack of the legions, boldly
passed the Danube, and spread terror and devastation through the province of Mæsia. To oppose
the inroad of this destroying host, the aged emperor took the field in person; but on this occasion
either his conduct or his fortune betrayed the glory which he had acquired in so many foreign
and domestic wars. He had the mortification of seeing his troops fly before an inconsiderable
detachment of the Barbarians, who pursued them to the edge of their fortified camp, and obliged
him to consult his safety by a precipitate and ignominious retreat. * The event of a second and
more successful action retrieved the honor of the Roman name; and the powers of art and
discipline prevailed, after an obstinate contest, over the efforts of irregular valor. The broken
army of the Goths abandoned the field of battle, the wasted province, and the passage of the
Danube: and although the eldest of the sons of Constantine was permitted to supply the place of
his father, the merit of the victory, which diffused universal joy, was ascribed to the auspicious
counsels of the emperor himself.
He contributed at least to improve this advantage, by his negotiations with the free and warlike
people of Chersonesus, whose capital, situate on the western coast of the Tauric or Crimæan
peninsula, still retained some vestiges of a Grecian colony, and was governed by a perpetual
magistrate, assisted by a council of senators, emphatically styled the Fathers of the City. The
Chersonites were animated against the Goths, by the memory of the wars, which, in the
preceding century, they had maintained with unequal forces against the invaders of their country.
They were connected with the Romans by the mutual benefits of commerce; as they were
supplied from the provinces of Asia with corn and manufactures, which they purchased with
their only productions, salt, wax, and hides. Obedient to the requisition of Constantine, they
prepared, under the conduct of their magistrate Diogenes, a considerable army, of which the
principal strength consisted in cross-bows and military chariots. The speedy march and intrepid
attack of the Chersonites, by diverting the attention of the Goths, assisted the operations of the
Imperial generals. The Goths, vanquished on every side, were driven into the mountains, where,
in the course of a severe campaign, above a hundred thousand were computed to have perished
by cold and hunger Peace was at length granted to their humble supplications; the eldest son of
Araric was accepted as the most valuable hostage; and Constantine endeavored to convince their
chiefs, by a liberal distribution of honors and rewards, how far the friendship of the Romans was
preferable to their enmity. In the expressions of his gratitude towards the faithful Chersonites,
the emperor was still more magnificent. The pride of the nation was gratified by the splendid
and almost royal decorations bestowed on their magistrate and his successors. A perpetual
exemption from all duties was stipulated for their vessels which traded to the ports of the Black
Sea. A regular subsidy was promised, of iron, corn, oil, and of every supply which could be
useful either in peace or war. But it was thought that the Sarmatians were sufficiently rewarded
by their deliverance from impending ruin; and the emperor, perhaps with too strict an economy,
deducted some part of the expenses of the war from the customary gratifications which were
allowed to that turbulent nation.
Exasperated by this apparent neglect, the Sarmatians soon forgot, with the levity of barbarians,
the services which they had so lately received, and the dangers which still threatened their
safety. Their inroads on the territory of the empire provoked the indignation of Constantine to
leave them to their fate; and he no longer opposed the ambition of Geberic, a renowned warrior,
who had recently ascended the Gothic throne. Wisumar, the Vandal king, whilst alone, and
unassisted, he defended his dominions with undaunted courage, was vanquished and slain in a
decisive battle, which swept away the flower of the Sarmatian youth. * The remainder of the
nation embraced the desperate expedient of arming their slaves, a hardy race of hunters and
herdsmen, by whose tumultuary aid they revenged their defeat, and expelled the invader from
their confines. But they soon discovered that they had exchanged a foreign for a domestic
enemy, more dangerous and more implacable. Enraged by their former servitude, elated by their
present glory, the slaves, under the name of Limigantes, claimed and usurped the possession of
the country which they had saved. Their masters, unable to withstand the ungoverned fury of the
populace, preferred the hardships of exile to the tyranny of their servants. Some of the fugitive
Sarmatians solicited a less ignominious dependence, under the hostile standard of the Goths. A
more numerous band retired beyond the Carpathian Mountains, among the Quadi, their German
allies, and were easily admitted to share a superfluous waste of uncultivated land. But the far
greater part of the distressed nation turned their eyes towards the fruitful provinces of Rome.
Imploring the protection and forgiveness of the emperor, they solemnly promised, as subjects in
peace, and as soldiers in war, the most inviolable fidelity to the empire which should graciously
receive them into its bosom. According to the maxims adopted by Probus and his successors, the
offers of this barbarian colony were eagerly accepted; and a competent portion of lands in the
provinces of Pannonia, Thrace, Macedonia, and Italy, were immediately assigned for the
habitation and subsistence of three hundred thousand Sarmatians.
By chastising the pride of the Goths, and by accepting the homage of a suppliant nation,
Constantine asserted the majesty of the Roman empire; and the ambassadors of Æthiopia, Persia,
and the most remote countries of India, congratulated the peace and prosperity of his
government. If he reckoned, among the favors of fortune, the death of his eldest son, of his
nephew, and perhaps of his wife, he enjoyed an uninterrupted flow of private as well as public
felicity, till the thirtieth year of his reign; a period which none of his predecessors, since
Augustus, had been permitted to celebrate. Constantine survived that solemn festival about ten
months; and at the mature age of sixty-four, after a short illness, he ended his memorable life at
the palace of Aquyrion, in the suburbs of Nicomedia, whither he had retired for the benefit of the
air, and with the hope of recruiting his exhausted strength by the use of the warm baths. The
excessive demonstrations of grief, or at least of mourning, surpassed whatever had been
practised on any former occasion. Notwithstanding the claims of the senate and people of
ancient Rome, the corpse of the deceased emperor, according to his last request, was transported
to the city, which was destined to preserve the name and memory of its founder. The body of
Constantine adorned with the vain symbols of greatness, the purple and diadem, was deposited
on a golden bed in one of the apartments of the palace, which for that purpose had been
splendidly furnished and illuminated. The forms of the court were strictly maintained. Every
day, at the appointed hours, the principal officers of the state, the army, and the household,
approaching the person of their sovereign with bended knees and a composed countenance,
offered their respectful homage as seriously as if he had been still alive. From motives of policy,
this theatrical representation was for some time continued; nor could flattery neglect the
opportunity of remarking that Constantine alone, by the peculiar indulgence of Heaven, had
reigned after his death.
But this reign could subsist only in empty pageantry; and it was soon discovered that the will of
the most absolute monarch is seldom obeyed, when his subjects have no longer anything to hope
from his favor, or to dread from his resentment. The same ministers and generals, who bowed
with such referential awe before the inanimate corpse of their deceased sovereign, were engaged
in secret consultations to exclude his two nephews, Dalmatius and Hannibalianus, from the share
which he had assigned them in the succession of the empire. We are too imperfectly acquainted
with the court of Constantine to form any judgment of the real motives which influenced the
leaders of the conspiracy; unless we should suppose that they were actuated by a spirit of
jealousy and revenge against the præfect Ablavius, a proud favorite, who had long directed the
counsels and abused the confidence of the late emperor. The arguments, by which they solicited
the concurrence of the soldiers and people, are of a more obvious nature; and they might with
decency, as well as truth, insist on the superior rank of the children of Constantine, the danger of
multiplying the number of sovereigns, and the impending mischiefs which threatened the
republic, from the discord of so many rival princes, who were not connected by the tender
sympathy of fraternal affection. The intrigue was conducted with zeal and secrecy, till a loud and
unanimous declaration was procured from the troops, that they would suffer none except the
sons of their lamented monarch to reign over the Roman empire. The younger Dalmatius, who
was united with his collateral relations by the ties of friendship and interest, is allowed to have
inherited a considerable share of the abilities of the great Constantine; but, on this occasion, he
does not appear to have concerted any measure for supporting, by arms, the just claims which
himself and his royal brother derived from the liberality of their uncle. Astonished and
overwhelmed by the tide of popular fury, they seem to have remained, without the power of
flight or of resistance, in the hands of their implacable enemies. Their fate was suspended till the
arrival of Constantius, the second, and perhaps the most favored, of the sons of Constantine.
Chapter XVIII: Character Of Constantine And His Sons. -- Part III.
The voice of the dying emperor had recommended the care of his funeral to the piety of
Constantius; and that prince, by the vicinity of his eastern station, could easily prevent the
diligence of his brothers, who resided in their distant government of Italy and Gaul. As soon as
he had taken possession of the palace of Constantinople, his first care was to remove the
apprehensions of his kinsmen, by a solemn oath which he pledged for their security. His next
employment was to find some specious pretence which might release his conscience from the
obligation of an imprudent promise. The arts of fraud were made subservient to the designs of
cruelty; and a manifest forgery was attested by a person of the most sacred character. From the
hands of the Bishop of Nicomedia, Constantius received a fatal scroll, affirmed to be the genuine
testament of his father; in which the emperor expressed his suspicions that he had been poisoned
by his brothers; and conjured his sons to revenge his death, and to consult their own safety, by
the punishment of the guilty. Whatever reasons might have been alleged by these unfortunate
princes to defend their life and honor against so incredible an accusation, they were silenced by
the furious clamors of the soldiers, who declared themselves, at once, their enemies, their
judges, and their executioners. The spirit, and even the forms of legal proceedings were
repeatedly violated in a promiscuous massacre; which involved the two uncles of Constantius,
seven of his cousins, of whom Dalmatius and Hannibalianus were the most illustrious, the
Patrician Optatus, who had married a sister of the late emperor, and the Præfect Ablavius, whose
power and riches had inspired him with some hopes of obtaining the purple. If it were necessary
to aggravate the horrors of this bloody scene, we might add, that Constantius himself had
espoused the daughter of his uncle Julius, and that he had bestowed his sister in marriage on his
cousin Hannibalianus. These alliances, which the policy of Constantine, regardless of the public
prejudice, had formed between the several branches of the Imperial house, served only to
convince mankind, that these princes were as cold to the endearments of conjugal affection, as
they were insensible to the ties of consanguinity, and the moving entreaties of youth and
innocence. Of so numerous a family, Gallus and Julian alone, the two youngest children of Julius
Constantius, were saved from the hands of the assassins, till their rage, satiated with slaughter,
had in some measure subsided. The emperor Constantius, who, in the absence of his brothers,
was the most obnoxious to guilt and reproach, discovered, on some future occasions, a faint and
transient remorse for those cruelties which the perfidious counsels of his ministers, and the
irresistible violence of the troops, had extorted from his unexperienced youth.
The massacre of the Flavian race was succeeded by a new division of the provinces; which was
ratified in a personal interview of the three brothers. Constantine, the eldest of the Cæsars,
obtained, with a certain preeminence of rank, the possession of the new capital, which bore his
own name and that of his father. Thrace, and the countries of the East, were allotted for the
patrimony of Constantius; and Constans was acknowledged as the lawful sovereign of Italy,
Africa, and the Western Illyricum. The armies submitted to their hereditary right; and they
condescended, after some delay, to accept from the Roman senate the title of Augustus. When
they first assumed the reins of government, the eldest of these princes was twenty-one, the
second twenty, and the third only seventeen, years of age.
While the martial nations of Europe followed the standards of his brothers, Constantius, at the
head of the effeminate troops of Asia, was left to sustain the weight of the Persian war. At the
decease of Constantine, the throne of the East was filled by Sapor, son of Hormouz, or
Hormisdas, and grandson of Narses, who, after the victory of Galerius, had humbly confessed the
superiority of the Roman power. Although Sapor was in the thirtieth year of his long reign, he
was still in the vigor of youth, as the date of his accession, by a very strange fatality, had
preceded that of his birth. The wife of Hormouz remained pregnant at the time of her husband's
death; and the uncertainty of the sex, as well as of the event, excited the ambitious hopes of the
princes of the house of Sassan. The apprehensions of civil war were at length removed, by the
positive assurance of the Magi, that the widow of Hormouz had conceived, and would safely
produce a son. Obedient to the voice of superstition, the Persians prepared, without delay, the
ceremony of his coronation. A royal bed, on which the queen lay in state, was exhibited in the
midst of the palace; the diadem was placed on the spot, which might be supposed to conceal the
future heir of Artaxerxes, and the prostrate satraps adored the majesty of their invisible and
insensible sovereign. If any credit can be given to this marvellous tale, which seems, however,
to be countenanced by the manners of the people, and by the extraordinary duration of his reign,
we must admire not only the fortune, but the genius, of Sapor. In the soft, sequestered education
of a Persian harem, the royal youth could discover the importance of exercising the vigor of his
mind and body; and, by his personal merit, deserved a throne, on which he had been seated,
while he was yet unconscious of the duties and temptations of absolute power. His minority was
exposed to the almost inevitable calamities of domestic discord; his capital was surprised and
plundered by Thair, a powerful king of Yemen, or Arabia; and the majesty of the royal family
was degraded by the captivity of a princess, the sister of the deceased king. But as soon as Sapor
attained the age of manhood, the presumptuous Thair, his nation, and his country, fell beneath
the first effort of the young warrior; who used his victory with so judicious a mixture of rigor
and clemency, that he obtained from the fears and gratitude of the Arabs the title of Dhoulacnaf,
or protector of the nation.
The ambition of the Persian, to whom his enemies ascribe the virtues of a soldier and a
statesman, was animated by the desire of revenging the disgrace of his fathers, and of wresting
from the hands of the Romans the five provinces beyond the Tigris. The military fame of
Constantine, and the real or apparent strength of his government, suspended the attack; and
while the hostile conduct of Sapor provoked the resentment, his artful negotiations amused the
patience of the Imperial court. The death of Constantine was the signal of war, and the actual
condition of the Syrian and Armenian frontier seemed to encourage the Persians by the prospect
of a rich spoil and an easy conquest. The example of the massacres of the palace diffused a spirit
of licentiousness and sedition among the troops of the East, who were no longer restrained by
their habits of obedience to a veteran commander. By the prudence of Constantius, who, from
the interview with his brothers in Pannonia, immediately hastened to the banks of the Euphrates,
the legions were gradually restored to a sense of duty and discipline; but the season of anarchy
had permitted Sapor to form the siege of Nisibis, and to occupy several of the most important
fortresses of Mesopotamia. In Armenia, the renowned Tiridates had long enjoyed the peace and
glory which he deserved by his valor and fidelity to the cause of Rome. The firm alliance which
he maintained with Constantine was productive of spiritual as well as of temporal benefits; by
the conversion of Tiridates, the character of a saint was applied to that of a hero, the Christian
faith was preached and established from the Euphrates to the shores of the Caspian, and
Armenia was attached to the empire by the double ties of policy and religion. But as many of the
Armenian nobles still refused to abandon the plurality of their gods and of their wives, the public
tranquillity was disturbed by a discontented faction, which insulted the feeble age of their
sovereign, and impatiently expected the hour of his death. He died at length after a reign of
fifty-six years, and the fortune of the Armenian monarchy expired with Tiridates. His lawful heir
was driven into exile, the Christian priests were either murdered or expelled from their churches,
the barbarous tribes of Albania were solicited to descend from their mountains; and two of the
most powerful governors, usurping the ensigns or the powers of royalty, implored the assistance
of Sapor, and opened the gates of their cities to the Persian garrisons. The Christian party, under
the guidance of the Archbishop of Artaxata, the immediate successor of St. Gregory the
Illuminator, had recourse to the piety of Constantius. After the troubles had continued about
three years, Antiochus, one of the officers of the household, executed with success the Imperial
commission of restoring Chosroes, * the son of Tiridates, to the throne of his fathers, of
distributing honors and rewards among the faithful servants of the house of Arsaces, and of
proclaiming a general amnesty, which was accepted by the greater part of the rebellious satraps.
But the Romans derived more honor than advantage from this revolution. Chosroes was a prince
of a puny stature and a pusillanimous spirit. Unequal to the fatigues of war, averse to the society
of mankind, he withdrew from his capital to a retired palace, which he built on the banks of the
River Eleutherus, and in the centre of a shady grove; where he consumed his vacant hours in the
rural sports of hunting and hawking. To secure this inglorious ease, he submitted to the
conditions of peace which Sapor condescended to impose; the payment of an annual tribute, and
the restitution of the fertile province of Atropatene, which the courage of Tiridates, and the
victorious arms of Galerius, had annexed to the Armenian monarchy.
During the long period of the reign of Constantius, the provinces of the East were afflicted by
the calamities of the Persian war. The irregular incursions of the light troops alternately spread
terror and devastation beyond the Tigris and beyond the Euphrates, from the gates of Ctesiphon
to those of Antioch; and this active service was performed by the Arabs of the desert, who were
divided in their interest and affections; some of their independent chiefs being enlisted in the
party of Sapor, whilst others had engaged their doubtful fidelity to the emperor. The more grave
and important operations of the war were conducted with equal vigor; and the armies of Rome
and Persia encountered each other in nine bloody fields, in two of which Constantius himself
commanded in person. The event of the day was most commonly adverse to the Romans, but in
the battle of Singara, heir imprudent valor had almost achieved a signal and decisive victory.
The stationary troops of Singara * retired on the approach of Sapor, who passed the Tigris over
three bridges, and occupied near the village of Hilleh an advantageous camp, which, by the labor
of his numerous pioneers, he surrounded in one day with a deep ditch and a lofty rampart. His
formidable host, when it was drawn out in order of battle, covered the banks of the river, the
adjacent heights, and the whole extent of a plain of above twelve miles, which separated the two
armies. Both were alike impatient to engage; but the Barbarians, after a slight resistance, fled in
disorder; unable to resist, or desirous to weary, the strength of the heavy legions, who, fainting
with heat and thirst, pursued them across the plain, and cut in pieces a line of cavalry, clothed in
complete armor, which had been posted before the gates of the camp to protect their retreat.
Constantius, who was hurried along in the pursuit, attempted, without effect, to restrain the ardor
of his troops, by representing to them the dangers of the approaching night, and the certainty of
completing their success with the return of day. As they depended much more on their own valor
than on the experience or the abilities of their chief, they silenced by their clamors his timid
remonstrances; and rushing with fury to the charge, filled up the ditch, broke down the rampart,
and dispersed themselves through the tents to recruit their exhausted strength, and to enjoy the
rich harvest of their labors. But the prudent Sapor had watched the moment of victory. His army,
of which the greater part, securely posted on the heights, had been spectators of the action,
advanced in silence, and under the shadow of the night; and his Persian archers, guided by the
illumination of the camp, poured a shower of arrows on a disarmed and licentious crowd. The
sincerity of history declares, that the Romans were vanquished with a dreadful slaughter, and
that the flying remnant of the legions was exposed to the most intolerable hardships. Even the
tenderness of panegyric, confessing that the glory of the emperor was sullied by the disobedience
of his soldiers, chooses to draw a veil over the circumstances of this melancholy retreat. Yet one
of those venal orators, so jealous of the fame of Constantius, relates, with amazing coolness, an
act of such incredible cruelty, as, in the judgment of posterity, must imprint a far deeper stain on
the honor of the Imperial name. The son of Sapor, the heir of his crown, had been made a
captive in the Persian camp. The unhappy youth, who might have excited the compassion of the
most savage enemy, was scourged, tortured, and publicly executed by the inhuman Romans.
Whatever advantages might attend the arms of Sapor in the field, though nine repeated victories
diffused among the nations the fame of his valor and conduct, he could not hope to succeed in
the execution of his designs, while the fortified towns of Mesopotamia, and, above all, the strong
and ancient city of Nisibis, remained in the possession of the Romans. In the space of twelve
years, Nisibis, which, since the time of Lucullus, had been deservedly esteemed the bulwark of
the East, sustained three memorable sieges against the power of Sapor; and the disappointed
monarch, after urging his attacks above sixty, eighty, and a hundred days, was thrice repulsed
with loss and ignominy. This large and populous city was situate about two days' journey from
the Tigris, in the midst of a pleasant and fertile plain at the foot of Mount Masius. A treble
enclosure of brick walls was defended by a deep ditch; and the intrepid resistance of Count
Lucilianus, and his garrison, was seconded by the desperate courage of the people. The citizens
of Nisibis were animated by the exhortations of their bishop, inured to arms by the presence of
danger, and convinced of the intentions of Sapor to plant a Persian colony in their room, and to
lead them away into distant and barbarous captivity. The event of the two former sieges elated
their confidence, and exasperated the haughty spirit of the Great King, who advanced a third
time towards Nisibis, at the head of the united forces of Persia and India. The ordinary
machines, invented to batter or undermine the walls, were rendered ineffectual by the superior
skill of the Romans; and many days had vainly elapsed, when Sapor embraced a resolution
worthy of an eastern monarch, who believed that the elements themselves were subject to his
power. At the stated season of the melting of the snows in Armenia, the River Mygdonius, which
divides the plain and the city of Nisibis, forms, like the Nile, an inundation over the adjacent
country. By the labor of the Persians, the course of the river was stopped below the town, and the
waters were confined on every side by solid mounds of earth. On this artificial lake, a fleet of
armed vessels filled with soldiers, and with engines which discharged stones of five hundred
pounds weight, advanced in order of battle, and engaged, almost upon a level, the troops which
defended the ramparts. *The irresistible force of the waters was alternately fatal to the
contending parties, till at length a portion of the walls, unable to sustain the accumulated
pressure, gave way at once, and exposed an ample breach of one hundred and fifty feet. The
Persians were instantly driven to the assault, and the fate of Nisibis depended on the event of the
day. The heavy-armed cavalry, who led the van of a deep column, were embarrassed in the mud,
and great numbers were drowned in the unseen holes which had been filled by the rushing
waters. The elephants, made furious by their wounds, increased the disorder, and trampled down
thousands of the Persian archers. The Great King, who, from an exalted throne, beheld the
misfortunes of his arms, sounded, with reluctant indignation, the signal of the retreat, and
suspended for some hours the prosecution of the attack. But the vigilant citizens improved the
opportunity of the night; and the return of day discovered a new wall of six feet in height, rising
every moment to fill up the interval of the breach. Notwithstanding the disappointment of his
hopes, and the loss of more than twenty thousand men, Sapor still pressed the reduction of
Nisibis, with an obstinate firmness, which could have yielded only to the necessity of defending
the eastern provinces of Persia against a formidable invasion of the Massagetæ. Alarmed by this
intelligence, he hastily relinquished the siege, and marched with rapid diligence from the banks
of the Tigris to those of the Oxus. The danger and difficulties of the Scythian war engaged him
soon afterwards to conclude, or at least to observe, a truce with the Roman emperor, which was
equally grateful to both princes; as Constantius himself, after the death of his two brothers, was
involved, by the revolutions of the West, in a civil contest, which required and seemed to exceed
the most vigorous exertion of his undivided strength.
After the partition of the empire, three years had scarcely elapsed before the sons of Constantine
seemed impatient to convince mankind that they were incapable of contenting themselves with
the dominions which they were unqualified to govern. The eldest of those princes soon
complained, that he was defrauded of his just proportion of the spoils of their murdered
kinsmen; and though he might yield to the superior guilt and merit of Constantius, he exacted
from Constans the cession of the African provinces, as an equivalent for the rich countries of
Macedonia and Greece, which his brother had acquired by the death of Dalmatius. The want of
sincerity, which Constantine experienced in a tedious and fruitless negotiation, exasperated the
fierceness of his temper; and he eagerly listened to those favorites, who suggested to him that his
honor, as well as his interest, was concerned in the prosecution of the quarrel. At the head of a
tumultuary band, suited for rapine rather than for conquest, he suddenly broke onto the
dominions of Constans, by the way of the Julian Alps, and the country round Aquileia felt the
first effects of his resentment. The measures of Constans, who then resided in Dacia, were
directed with more prudence and ability. On the news of his brother's invasion, he detached a
select and disciplined body of his Illyrian troops, proposing to follow them in person, with the
remainder of his forces. But the conduct of his lieutenants soon terminated the unnatural contest.
By the artful appearances of flight, Constantine was betrayed into an ambuscade, which had
been concealed in a wood, where the rash youth, with a few attendants, was surprised,
surrounded, and slain. His body, after it had been found in the obscure stream of the Alsa,
obtained the honors of an Imperial sepulchre; but his provinces transferred their allegiance to the
conqueror, who, refusing to admit his elder brother Constantius to any share in these new
acquisitions, maintained the undisputed possession of more than two thirds of the Roman
empire.
Chapter XVIII: Character Of Constantine And His Sons. -- Part IV.
The fate of Constans himself was delayed about ten years longer, and the revenge of his brother's
death was reserved for the more ignoble hand of a domestic traitor. The pernicious tendency of
the system introduced by Constantine was displayed in the feeble administration of his sons;
who, by their vices and weakness, soon lost the esteem and affections of their people. The pride
assumed by Constans, from the unmerited success of his arms, was rendered more contemptible
by his want of abilities and application. His fond partiality towards some German captives,
distinguished only by the charms of youth, was an object of scandal to the people; and
Magnentius, an ambitious soldier, who was himself of Barbarian extraction, was encouraged by
the public discontent to assert the honor of the Roman name. The chosen bands of Jovians and
Herculians, who acknowledged Magnentius as their leader, maintained the most respectable and
important station in the Imperial camp. The friendship of Marcellinus, count of the sacred
largesses, supplied with a liberal hand the means of seduction. The soldiers were convinced by
the most specious arguments, that the republic summoned them to break the bonds of hereditary
servitude; and, by the choice of an active and vigilant prince, to reward the same virtues which
had raised the ancestors of the degenerate Constans from a private condition to the throne of the
world. As soon as the conspiracy was ripe for execution, Marcellinus, under the pretence of
celebrating his son's birthday, gave a splendid entertainment to the illustrious and
honorablepersons of the court of Gaul, which then resided in the city of Autun. The
intemperance of the feast was artfully protracted till a very late hour of the night; and the
unsuspecting guests were tempted to indulge themselves in a dangerous and guilty freedom of
conversation. On a sudden the doors were thrown open, and Magnentius, who had retired for a
few moments, returned into the apartment, invested with the diadem and purple. The
conspirators instantly saluted him with the titles of Augustus and Emperor. The surprise, the
terror, the intoxication, the ambitious hopes, and the mutual ignorance of the rest of the
assembly, prompted them to join their voices to the general acclamation. The guards hastened to
take the oath of fidelity; the gates of the town were shut; and before the dawn of day,
Magnentius became master of the troops and treasure of the palace and city of Autun. By his
secrecy and diligence he entertained some hopes of surprising the person of Constans, who was
pursuing in the adjacent forest his favorite amusement of hunting, or perhaps some pleasures of
a more private and criminal nature. The rapid progress of fame allowed him, however, an instant
for flight, though the desertion of his soldiers and subjects deprived him of the power of
resistance. Before he could reach a seaport in Spain, where he intended to embark, he was
overtaken near Helena, at the foot of the Pyrenees, by a party of light cavalry, whose chief,
regardless of the sanctity of a temple, executed his commission by the murder of the son of
Constantine.
As soon as the death of Constans had decided this easy but important revolution, the example of
the court of Autun was imitated by the provinces of the West. The authority of Magnentius was
acknowledged through the whole extent of the two great præfectures of Gaul and Italy; and the
usurper prepared, by every act of oppression, to collect a treasure, which might discharge the
obligation of an immense donative, and supply the expenses of a civil war. The martial countries
of Illyricum, from the Danube to the extremity of Greece, had long obeyed the government of
Vetranio, an aged general, beloved for the simplicity of his manners, and who had acquired
some reputation by his experience and services in war. Attached by habit, by duty, and by
gratitude, to the house of Constantine, he immediately gave the strongest assurances to the only
surviving son of his late master, that he would expose, with unshaken fidelity, his person and his
troops, to inflict a just revenge on the traitors of Gaul. But the legions of Vetranio were seduced,
rather than provoked, by the example of rebellion; their leader soon betrayed a want of firmness,
or a want of sincerity; and his ambition derived a specious pretence from the approbation of the
princess Constantina. That cruel and aspiring woman, who had obtained from the great
Constantine, her father, the rank of Augusta, placed the diadem with her own hands on the head
of the Illyrian general; and seemed to expect from his victory the accomplishment of those
unbounded hopes, of which she had been disappointed by the death of her husband
Hannibalianus. Perhaps it was without the consent of Constantina, that the new emperor formed
a necessary, though dishonorable, alliance with the usurper of the West, whose purple was so
recently stained with her brother's blood.
The intelligence of these important events, which so deeply affected the honor and safety of the
Imperial house, recalled the arms of Constantius from the inglorious prosecution of the Persian
war. He recommended the care of the East to his lieutenants, and afterwards to his cousin
Gallus, whom he raised from a prison to a throne; and marched towards Europe, with a mind
agitated by the conflict of hope and fear, of grief and indignation. On his arrival at Heraclea in
Thrace, the emperor gave audience to the ambassadors of Magnentius and Vetranio. The first
author of the conspiracy Marcellinus, who in some measure had bestowed the purple on his new
master, boldly accepted this dangerous commission; and his three colleagues were selected from
the illustrious personages of the state and army. These deputies were instructed to soothe the
resentment, and to alarm the fears, of Constantius. They were empowered to offer him the
friendship and alliance of the western princes, to cement their union by a double marriage; of
Constantius with the daughter of Magnentius, and of Magnentius himself with the ambitious
Constantina; and to acknowledge in the treaty the preeminence of rank, which might justly be
claimed by the emperor of the East. Should pride and mistaken piety urge him to refuse these
equitable conditions, the ambassadors were ordered to expatiate on the inevitable ruin which
must attend his rashness, if he ventured to provoke the sovereigns of the West to exert their
superior strength; and to employ against him that valor, those abilities, and those legions, to
which the house of Constantine had been indebted for so many triumphs. Such propositions and
such arguments appeared to deserve the most serious attention; the answer of Constantius was
deferred till the next day; and as he had reflected on the importance of justifying a civil war in
the opinion of the people, he thus addressed his council, who listened with real or affected
credulity: "Last night," said he, "after I retired to rest, the shade of the great Constantine,
embracing the corpse of my murdered brother, rose before my eyes; his well-known voice
awakened me to revenge, forbade me to despair of the republic, and assured me of the success
and immortal glory which would crown the justice of my arms." The authority of such a vision,
or rather of the prince who alleged it, silenced every doubt, and excluded all negotiation. The
ignominious terms of peace were rejected with disdain. One of the ambassadors of the tyrant
was dismissed with the haughty answer of Constantius; his colleagues, as unworthy of the
privileges of the law of nations, were put in irons; and the contending powers prepared to wage
an implacable war.
Such was the conduct, and such perhaps was the duty, of the brother of Constans towards the
perfidious usurper of Gaul. The situation and character of Vetranio admitted of milder measures;
and the policy of the Eastern emperor was directed to disunite his antagonists, and to separate
the forces of Illyricum from the cause of rebellion. It was an easy task to deceive the frankness
and simplicity of Vetranio, who, fluctuating some time between the opposite views of honor and
interest, displayed to the world the insincerity of his temper, and was insensibly engaged in the
snares of an artful negotiation. Constantius acknowledged him as a legitimate and equal
colleague in the empire, on condition that he would renounce his disgraceful alliance with
Magnentius, and appoint a place of interview on the frontiers of their respective provinces;
where they might pledge their friendship by mutual vows of fidelity, and regulate by common
consent the future operations of the civil war. In consequence of this agreement, Vetranio
advanced to the city of Sardica, at the head of twenty thousand horse, and of a more numerous
body of infantry; a power so far superior to the forces of Constantius, that the Illyrian emperor
appeared to command the life and fortunes of his rival, who, depending on the success of his
private negotiations, had seduced the troops, and undermined the throne, of Vetranio. The
chiefs, who had secretly embraced the party of Constantius, prepared in his favor a public
spectacle, calculated to discover and inflame the passions of the multitude. The united armies
were commanded to assemble in a large plain near the city. In the centre, according to the rules
of ancient discipline, a military tribunal, or rather scaffold, was erected, from whence the
emperors were accustomed, on solemn and important occasions, to harangue the troops. The
well-ordered ranks of Romans and Barbarians, with drawn swords, or with erected spears, the
squadrons of cavalry, and the cohorts of infantry, distinguished by the variety of their arms and
ensigns, formed an immense circle round the tribunal; and the attentive silence which they
preserved was sometimes interrupted by loud bursts of clamor or of applause. In the presence of
this formidable assembly, the two emperors were called upon to explain the situation of public
affairs: the precedency of rank was yielded to the royal birth of Constantius; and though he was
indifferently skilled in the arts of rhetoric, he acquitted himself, under these difficult
circumstances, with firmness, dexterity, and eloquence. The first part of his oration seemed to be
pointed only against the tyrant of Gaul; but while he tragically lamented the cruel murder of
Constans, he insinuated, that none, except a brother, could claim a right to the succession of his
brother. He displayed, with some complacency, the glories of his Imperial race; and recalled to
the memory of the troops the valor, the triumphs, the liberality of the great Constantine, to
whose sons they had engaged their allegiance by an oath of fidelity, which the ingratitude of his
most favored servants had tempted them to violate. The officers, who surrounded the tribunal,
and were instructed to act their part in this extraordinary scene, confessed the irresistible power
of reason and eloquence, by saluting the emperor Constantius as their lawful sovereign. The
contagion of loyalty and repentance was communicated from rank to rank; till the plain of
Sardica resounded with the universal acclamation of "Away with these upstart usurpers! Long
life and victory to the son of Constantine! Under his banners alone we will fight and conquer."
The shout of thousands, their menacing gestures, the fierce clashing of their arms, astonished
and subdued the courage of Vetranio, who stood, amidst the defection of his followers, in
anxious and silent suspense. Instead of embracing the last refuge of generous despair, he tamely
submitted to his fate; and taking the diadem from his head, in the view of both armies fell
prostrate at the feet of his conqueror. Constantius used his victory with prudence and
moderation; and raising from the ground the aged suppliant, whom he affected to style by the
endearing name of Father, he gave him his hand to descend from the throne. The city of Prusa
was assigned for the exile or retirement of the abdicated monarch, who lived six years in the
enjoyment of ease and affluence. He often expressed his grateful sense of the goodness of
Constantius, and, with a very amiable simplicity, advised his benefactor to resign the sceptre of
the world, and to seek for content (where alone it could be found) in the peaceful obscurity of a
private condition.
The behavior of Constantius on this memorable occasion was celebrated with some appearance
of justice; and his courtiers compared the studied orations which a Pericles or a Demosthenes
addressed to the populace of Athens, with the victorious eloquence which had persuaded an
armed multitude to desert and depose the object of their partial choice. The approaching contest
with Magnentius was of a more serious and bloody kind. The tyrant advanced by rapid marches
to encounter Constantius, at the head of a numerous army, composed of Gauls and Spaniards, of
Franks and Saxons; of those provincials who supplied the strength of the legions, and of those
barbarians who were dreaded as the most formidable enemies of the republic. The fertile plains
of the Lower Pannonia, between the Drave, the Save, and the Danube, presented a spacious
theatre; and the operations of the civil war were protracted during the summer months by the
skill or timidity of the combatants. Constantius had declared his intention of deciding the
quarrel in the fields of Cibalis, a name that would animate his troops by the remembrance of the
victory, which, on the same auspicious ground, had been obtained by the arms of his father
Constantine. Yet by the impregnable fortifications with which the emperor encompassed his
camp, he appeared to decline, rather than to invite, a general engagement. It was the object of
Magnentius to tempt or to compel his adversary to relinquish this advantageous position; and he
employed, with that view, the various marches, evolutions, and stratagems, which the knowledge
of the art of war could suggest to an experienced officer. He carried by assault the important
town of Siscia; made an attack on the city of Sirmium, which lay in the rear of the Imperial
camp, attempted to force a passage over the Save into the eastern provinces of Illyricum; and cut
in pieces a numerous detachment, which he had allured into the narrow passes of Adarne.
During the greater part of the summer, the tyrant of Gaul showed himself master of the field.
The troops of Constantius were harassed and dispirited; his reputation declined in the eye of the
world; and his pride condescended to solicit a treaty of peace, which would have resigned to the
assassin of Constans the sovereignty of the provinces beyond the Alps. These offers were
enforced by the eloquence of Philip the Imperial ambassador; and the council as well as the
army of Magnentius were disposed to accept them. But the haughty usurper, careless of the
remonstrances of his friends, gave orders that Philip should be detained as a captive, or, at least,
as a hostage; while he despatched an officer to reproach Constantius with the weakness of his
reign, and to insult him by the promise of a pardon if he would instantly abdicate the purple.
"That he should confide in the justice of his cause, and the protection of an avenging Deity," was
the only answer which honor permitted the emperor to return. But he was so sensible of the
difficulties of his situation, that he no longer dared to retaliate the indignity which had been
offered to his representative. The negotiation of Philip was not, however, ineffectual, since he
determined Sylvanus the Frank, a general of merit and reputation, to desert with a considerable
body of cavalry, a few days before the battle of Mursa.
The city of Mursa, or Essek, celebrated in modern times for a bridge of boats, five miles in
length, over the River Drave, and the adjacent morasses, has been always considered as a place
of importance in the wars of Hungary. Magnentius, directing his march towards Mursa, set fire
to the gates, and, by a sudden assault, had almost scaled the walls of the town. The vigilance of
the garrison extinguished the flames; the approach of Constantius left him no time to continue
the operations of the siege; and the emperor soon removed the only obstacle that could
embarrass his motions, by forcing a body of troops which had taken post in an adjoining
amphitheatre. The field of battle round Mursa was a naked and level plain: on this ground the
army of Constantius formed, with the Drave on their right; while their left, either from the nature
of their disposition, or from the superiority of their cavalry, extended far beyond the right flank
of Magnentius. The troops on both sides remained under arms, in anxious expectation, during
the greatest part of the morning; and the son of Constantine, after animating his soldiers by an
eloquent speech, retired into a church at some distance from the field of battle, and committed to
his generals the conduct of this decisive day. They deserved his confidence by the valor and
military skill which they exerted. They wisely began the action upon the left; and advancing
their whole wing of cavalry in an oblique line, they suddenly wheeled it on the right flank of the
enemy, which was unprepared to resist the impetuosity of their charge. But the Romans of the
West soon rallied, by the habits of discipline; and the Barbarians of Germany supported the
renown of their national bravery. The engagement soon became general; was maintained with
various and singular turns of fortune; and scarcely ended with the darkness of the night. The
signal victory which Constantius obtained is attributed to the arms of his cavalry. His cuirassiers
are described as so many massy statues of steel, glittering with their scaly armor, and breaking
with their ponderous lances the firm array of the Gallic legions. As soon as the legions gave way,
the lighter and more active squadrons of the second line rode sword in hand into the intervals,
and completed the disorder. In the mean while, the huge bodies of the Germans were exposed
almost naked to the dexterity of the Oriental archers; and whole troops of those Barbarians were
urged by anguish and despair to precipitate themselves into the broad and rapid stream of the
Drave. The number of the slain was computed at fifty-four thousand men, and the slaughter of
the conquerors was more considerable than that of the vanquished; a circumstance which proves
the obstinacy of the contest, and justifies the observation of an ancient writer, that the forces of
the empire were consumed in the fatal battle of Mursa, by the loss of a veteran army, sufficient
to defend the frontiers, or to add new triumphs to the glory of Rome. Notwithstanding the
invectives of a servile orator, there is not the least reason to believe that the tyrant deserted his
own standard in the beginning of the engagement. He seems to have displayed the virtues of a
general and of a soldier till the day was irrecoverably lost, and his camp in the possession of the
enemy. Magnentius then consulted his safety, and throwing away the Imperial ornaments,
escaped with some difficulty from the pursuit of the light horse, who incessantly followed his
rapid flight from the banks of the Drave to the foot of the Julian Alps.
The approach of winter supplied the indolence of Constantius with specious reasons for
deferring the prosecution of the war till the ensuing spring. Magnentius had fixed his residence
in the city of Aquileia, and showed a seeming resolution to dispute the passage of the mountains
and morasses which fortified the confines of the Venetian province. The surprisal of a castle in
the Alps by the secret march of the Imperialists, could scarcely have determined him to
relinquish the possession of Italy, if the inclinations of the people had supported the cause of
their tyrant. But the memory of the cruelties exercised by his ministers, after the unsuccessful
revolt of Nepotian, had left a deep impression of horror and resentment on the minds of the
Romans. That rash youth, the son of the princess Eutropia, and the nephew of Constantine, had
seen with indignation the sceptre of the West usurped by a perfidious barbarian. Arming a
desperate troop of slaves and gladiators, he overpowered the feeble guard of the domestic
tranquillity of Rome, received the homage of the senate, and assuming the title of Augustus,
precariously reigned during a tumult of twenty-eight days. The march of some regular forces put
an end to his ambitious hopes: the rebellion was extinguished in the blood of Nepotian, of his
mother Eutropia, and of his adherents; and the proscription was extended to all who had
contracted a fatal alliance with the name and family of Constantine. But as soon as Constantius,
after the battle of Mursa, became master of the sea-coast of Dalmatia, a band of noble exiles,
who had ventured to equip a fleet in some harbor of the Adriatic, sought protection and revenge
in his victorious camp. By their secret intelligence with their countrymen, Rome and the Italian
cities were persuaded to display the banners of Constantius on their walls. The grateful veterans,
enriched by the liberality of the father, signalized their gratitude and loyalty to the son. The
cavalry, the legions, and the auxiliaries of Italy, renewed their oath of allegiance to Constantius;
and the usurper, alarmed by the general desertion, was compelled, with the remains of his
faithful troops, to retire beyond the Alps into the provinces of Gaul. The detachments, however,
which were ordered either to press or to intercept the flight of Magnentius, conducted
themselves with the usual imprudence of success; and allowed him, in the plains of Pavia, an
opportunity of turning on his pursuers, and of gratifying his despair by the carnage of a useless
victory.
The pride of Magnentius was reduced, by repeated misfortunes, to sue, and to sue in vain, for
peace. He first despatched a senator, in whose abilities he confided, and afterwards several
bishops, whose holy character might obtain a more favorable audience, with the offer of
resigning the purple, and the promise of devoting the remainder of his life to the service of the
emperor. But Constantius, though he granted fair terms of pardon and reconciliation to all who
abandoned the standard of rebellion, avowed his inflexible resolution to inflict a just
punishment on the crimes of an assassin, whom he prepared to overwhelm on every side by the
effort of his victorious arms. An Imperial fleet acquired the easy possession of Africa and Spain,
confirmed the wavering faith of the Moorish nations, and landed a considerable force, which
passed the Pyrenees, and advanced towards Lyons, the last and fatal station of Magnentius. The
temper of the tyrant, which was never inclined to clemency, was urged by distress to exercise
every act of oppression which could extort an immediate supply from the cities of Gaul. Their
patience was at length exhausted; and Treves, the seat of Prætorian government, gave the signal
of revolt, by shutting her gates against Decentius, who had been raised by his brother to the rank
either of Cæsar or of Augustus. From Treves, Decentius was obliged to retire to Sens, where he
was soon surrounded by an army of Germans, whom the pernicious arts of Constantius had
introduced into the civil dissensions of Rome. In the mean time, the Imperial troops forced the
passages of the Cottian Alps, and in the bloody combat of Mount Seleucus irrevocably fixed the
title of rebels on the party of Magnentius. He was unable to bring another army into the field;
the fidelity of his guards was corrupted; and when he appeared in public to animate them by his
exhortations, he was saluted with a unanimous shout of "Long live the emperor Constantius!"
The tyrant, who perceived that they were preparing to deserve pardon and rewards by the
sacrifice of the most obnoxious criminal, prevented their design by falling on his sword; a death
more easy and more honorable than he could hope to obtain from the hands of an enemy, whose
revenge would have been colored with the specious pretence of justice and fraternal piety. The
example of suicide was imitated by Decentius, who strangled himself on the news of his
brother's death. The author of the conspiracy, Marcellinus, had long since disappeared in the
battle of Mursa, and the public tranquillity was confirmed by the execution of the surviving
leaders of a guilty and unsuccessful faction. A severe inquisition was extended over all who,
either from choice or from compulsion, had been involved in the cause of rebellion. Paul,
surnamed Catena from his superior skill in the judicial exercise of tyranny, * was sent to explore
the latent remains of the conspiracy in the remote province of Britain. The honest indignation
expressed by Martin, vice-præfect of the island, was interpreted as an evidence of his own guilt;
and the governor was urged to the necessity of turning against his breast the sword with which
he had been provoked to wound the Imperial minister. The most innocent subjects of the West
were exposed to exile and confiscation, to death and torture; and as the timid are always cruel,
the mind of Constantius was inaccessible to mercy.
Chapter XIX: Constantius Sole Emperor.
Part I.
Constantius Sole Emperor. -- Elevation And Death Of Gallus. -- Danger And Elevation Of
Julian. -- Sarmatian And Persian Wars. -- Victories Of Julian In Gaul.
The divided provinces of the empire were again united by the victory of Constantius; but as that
feeble prince was destitute of personal merit, either in peace or war; as he feared his generals,
and distrusted his ministers; the triumph of his arms served only to establish the reign of the
eunuchs over the Roman world. Those unhappy beings, the ancient production of Oriental
jealousy and despotism, were introduced into Greece and Rome by the contagion of Asiatic
luxury. Their progress was rapid; and the eunuchs, who, in the time of Augustus, had been
abhorred, as the monstrous retinue of an Egyptian queen, were gradually admitted into the
families of matrons, of senators, and of the emperors themselves. Restrained by the severe
edicts of Domitian and Nerva, cherished by the pride of Diocletian, reduced to an humble
station by the prudence of Constantine, they multiplied in the palaces of his degenerate sons,
and insensibly acquired the knowledge, and at length the direction, of the secret councils of
Constantius. The aversion and contempt which mankind had so uniformly entertained for that
imperfect species, appears to have degraded their character, and to have rendered them almost as
incapable as they were supposed to be, of conceiving any generous sentiment, or of performing
any worthy action. But the eunuchs were skilled in the arts of flattery and intrigue; and they
alternately governed the mind of Constantius by his fears, his indolence, and his vanity. Whilst
he viewed in a deceitful mirror the fair appearance of public prosperity, he supinely permitted
them to intercept the complaints of the injured provinces, to accumulate immense treasures by
the sale of justice and of honors; to disgrace the most important dignities, by the promotion of
those who had purchased at their hands the powers of oppression, and to gratify their resentment
against the few independent spirits, who arrogantly refused to solicit the protection of slaves. Of
these slaves the most distinguished was the chamberlain Eusebius, who ruled the monarch and
the palace with such absolute sway, that Constantius, according to the sarcasm of an impartial
historian, possessed some credit with this haughty favorite. By his artful suggestions, the
emperor was persuaded to subscribe the condemnation of the unfortunate Gallus, and to add a
new crime to the long list of unnatural murders which pollute the honor of the house of
Constantine.
When the two nephews of Constantine, Gallus and Julian, were saved from the fury of the
soldiers, the former was about twelve, and the latter about six, years of age; and, as the eldest
was thought to be of a sickly constitution, they obtained with the less difficulty a precarious and
dependent life, from the affected pity of Constantius, who was sensible that the execution of
these helpless orphans would have been esteemed, by all mankind, an act of the most deliberate
cruelty. * Different cities of Ionia and Bithynia were assigned for the places of their exile and
education; but as soon as their growing years excited the jealousy of the emperor, he judged it
more prudent to secure those unhappy youths in the strong castle of Macellum, near Cæsarea.
The treatment which they experienced during a six years' confinement, was partly such as they
could hope from a careful guardian, and partly such as they might dread from a suspicious
tyrant. Their prison was an ancient palace, the residence of the kings of Cappadocia; the
situation was pleasant, the buildings of stately, the enclosure spacious. They pursued their
studies, and practised their exercises, under the tuition of the most skilful masters; and the
numerous household appointed to attend, or rather to guard, the nephews of Constantine, was
not unworthy of the dignity of their birth. But they could not disguise to themselves that they
were deprived of fortune, of freedom, and of safety; secluded from the society of all whom they
could trust or esteem, and condemned to pass their melancholy hours in the company of slaves
devoted to the commands of a tyrant who had already injured them beyond the hope of
reconciliation. At length, however, the emergencies of the state compelled the emperor, or rather
his eunuchs, to invest Gallus, in the twenty-fifth year of his age, with the title of Cæsar, and to
cement this political connection by his marriage with the princess Constantina. After a formal
interview, in which the two princes mutually engaged their faith never to undertake any thing to
the prejudice of each other, they repaired without delay to their respective stations. Constantius
continued his march towards the West, and Gallus fixed his residence at Antioch; from whence,
with a delegated authority, he administered the five great dioceses of the eastern præfecture. In
this fortunate change, the new Cæsar was not unmindful of his brother Julian, who obtained the
honors of his rank, the appearances of liberty, and the restitution of an ample patrimony.
The writers the most indulgent to the memory of Gallus, and even Julian himself, though he
wished to cast a veil over the frailties of his brother, are obliged to confess that the Cæsar was
incapable of reigning. Transported from a prison to a throne, he possessed neither genius nor
application, nor docility to compensate for the want of knowledge and experience. A temper
naturally morose and violent, instead of being corrected, was soured by solitude and adversity;
the remembrance of what he had endured disposed him to retaliation rather than to sympathy;
and the ungoverned sallies of his rage were often fatal to those who approached his person, or
were subject to his power. Constantina, his wife, is described, not as a woman, but as one of the
infernal furies tormented with an insatiate thirst of human blood. Instead of employing her
influence to insinuate the mild counsels of prudence and humanity, she exasperated the fierce
passions of her husband; and as she retained the vanity, though she had renounced, the
gentleness of her sex, a pearl necklace was esteemed an equivalent price for the murder of an
innocent and virtuous nobleman. The cruelty of Gallus was sometimes displayed in the
undissembled violence of popular or military executions; and was sometimes disguised by the
abuse of law, and the forms of judicial proceedings. The private houses of Antioch, and the
places of public resort, were besieged by spies and informers; and the Cæsar himself, concealed
in a plebeian habit, very frequently condescended to assume that odious character. Every
apartment of the palace was adorned with the instruments of death and torture, and a general
consternation was diffused through the capital of Syria. The prince of the East, as if he had been
conscious how much he had to fear, and how little he deserved to reign, selected for the objects
of his resentment the provincials accused of some imaginary treason, and his own courtiers,
whom with more reason he suspected of incensing, by their secret correspondence, the timid and
suspicious mind of Constantius. But he forgot that he was depriving himself of his only support,
the affection of the people; whilst he furnished the malice of his enemies with the arms of truth,
and afforded the emperor the fairest pretence of exacting the forfeit of his purple, and of his life.
As long as the civil war suspended the fate of the Roman world, Constantius dissembled his
knowledge of the weak and cruel administration to which his choice had subjected the East; and
the discovery of some assassins, secretly despatched to Antioch by the tyrant of Gaul, was
employed to convince the public, that the emperor and the Cæsar were united by the same
interest, and pursued by the same enemies. But when the victory was decided in favor of
Constantius, his dependent colleague became less useful and less formidable. Every
circumstance of his conduct was severely and suspiciously examined, and it was privately
resolved, either to deprive Gallus of the purple, or at least to remove him from the indolent
luxury of Asia to the hardships and dangers of a German war. The death of Theophilus, consular
of the province of Syria, who in a time of scarcity had been massacred by the people of Antioch,
with the connivance, and almost at the instigation, of Gallus, was justly resented, not only as an
act of wanton cruelty, but as a dangerous insult on the supreme majesty of Constantius. Two
ministers of illustrious rank, Domitian the Oriental præfect, and Montius, quæstor of the palace,
were empowered by a special commission * to visit and reform the state of the East. They were
instructed to behave towards Gallus with moderation and respect, and, by the gentlest arts of
persuasion, to engage him to comply with the invitation of his brother and colleague. The
rashness of the præfect disappointed these prudent measures, and hastened his own ruin, as well
as that of his enemy. On his arrival at Antioch, Domitian passed disdainfully before the gates of
the palace, and alleging a slight pretence of indisposition, continued several days in sullen
retirement, to prepare an inflammatory memorial, which he transmitted to the Imperial court.
Yielding at length to the pressing solicitations of Gallus, the præfect condescended to take his
seat in council; but his first step was to signify a concise and haughty mandate, importing that
the Cæsar should immediately repair to Italy, and threatening that he himself would punish his
delay or hesitation, by suspending the usual allowance of his household. The nephew and
daughter of Constantine, who could ill brook the insolence of a subject, expressed their
resentment by instantly delivering Domitian to the custody of a guard. The quarrel still admitted
of some terms of accommodation. They were rendered impracticable by the imprudent behavior
of Montius, a statesman whose arts and experience were frequently betrayed by the levity of his
disposition. The quæstor reproached Gallus in a haughty language, that a prince who was
scarcely authorized to remove a municipal magistrate, should presume to imprison a Prætorian
præfect; convoked a meeting of the civil and military officers; and required them, in the name of
their sovereign, to defend the person and dignity of his representatives. By this rash declaration
of war, the impatient temper of Gallus was provoked to embrace the most desperate counsels.
He ordered his guards to stand to their arms, assembled the populace of Antioch, and
recommended to their zeal the care of his safety and revenge. His commands were too fatally
obeyed. They rudely seized the præfect and the quæstor, and tying their legs together with ropes,
they dragged them through the streets of the city, inflicted a thousand insults and a thousand
wounds on these unhappy victims, and at last precipitated their mangled and lifeless bodies into
the stream of the Orontes.
After such a deed, whatever might have been the designs of Gallus, it was only in a field of
battle that he could assert his innocence with any hope of success. But the mind of that prince
was formed of an equal mixture of violence and weakness. Instead of assuming the title of
Augustus, instead of employing in his defence the troops and treasures of the East, he suffered
himself to be deceived by the affected tranquillity of Constantius, who, leaving him the vain
pageantry of a court, imperceptibly recalled the veteran legions from the provinces of Asia. But
as it still appeared dangerous to arrest Gallus in his capital, the slow and safer arts of
dissimulation were practised with success. The frequent and pressing epistles of Constantius
were filled with professions of confidence and friendship; exhorting the Cæsar to discharge the
duties of his high station, to relieve his colleague from a part of the public cares, and to assist the
West by his presence, his counsels, and his arms. After so many reciprocal injuries, Gallus had
reason to fear and to distrust. But he had neglected the opportunities of flight and of resistance;
he was seduced by the flattering assurances of the tribune Scudilo, who, under the semblance of
a rough soldier, disguised the most artful insinuation; and he depended on the credit of his wife
Constantina, till the unseasonable death of that princess completed the ruin in which he had been
involved by her impetuous passions.
Chapter XIX: Constantius Sole Emperor. -- Part II.
After a long delay, the reluctant Cæsar set forwards on his journey to the Imperial court. From
Antioch to Hadrianople, he traversed the wide extent of his dominions with a numerous and
stately train; and as he labored to conceal his apprehensions from the world, and perhaps from
himself, he entertained the people of Constantinople with an exhibition of the games of the
circus. The progress of the journey might, however, have warned him of the impending danger.
In all the principal cities he was met by ministers of confidence, commissioned to seize the
offices of government, to observe his motions, and to prevent the hasty sallies of his despair. The
persons despatched to secure the provinces which he left behind, passed him with cold
salutations, or affected disdain; and the troops, whose station lay along the public road, were
studiously removed on his approach, lest they might be tempted to offer their swords for the
service of a civil war. After Gallus had been permitted to repose himself a few days at
Hadrianople, he received a mandate, expressed in the most haughty and absolute style, that his
splendid retinue should halt in that city, while the Cæsar himself, with only ten post-carriages,
should hasten to the Imperial residence at Milan. In this rapid journey, the profound respect
which was due to the brother and colleague of Constantius, was insensibly changed into rude
familiarity; and Gallus, who discovered in the countenances of the attendants that they already
considered themselves as his guards, and might soon be employed as his executioners, began to
accuse his fatal rashness, and to recollect, with terror and remorse, the conduct by which he had
provoked his fate. The dissimulation which had hitherto been preserved, was laid aside at
Petovio, * in Pannonia. He was conducted to a palace in the suburbs, where the general Barbatio,
with a select band of soldiers, who could neither be moved by pity, nor corrupted by rewards,
expected the arrival of his illustrious victim. In the close of the evening he was arrested,
ignominiously stripped of the ensigns of Cæsar, and hurried away to Pola, in Istria, a sequestered
prison, which had been so recently polluted with royal blood. The horror which he felt was soon
increased by the appearance of his implacable enemy the eunuch Eusebius, who, with the
assistance of a notary and a tribune, proceeded to interrogate him concerning the administration
of the East. The Cæsar sank under the weight of shame and guilt, confessed all the criminal
actions and all the treasonable designs with which he was charged; and by imputing them to the
advice of his wife, exasperated the indignation of Constantius, who reviewed with partial
prejudice the minutes of the examination. The emperor was easily convinced, that his own safety
was incompatible with the life of his cousin: the sentence of death was signed, despatched, and
executed; and the nephew of Constantine, with his hands tied behind his back, was beheaded in
prison like the vilest malefactor. Those who are inclined to palliate the cruelties of Constantius,
assert that he soon relented, and endeavored to recall the bloody mandate; but that the second
messenger, intrusted with the reprieve, was detained by the eunuchs, who dreaded the
unforgiving temper of Gallus, and were desirous of reuniting to their empire the wealthy
provinces of the East.
Besides the reigning emperor, Julian alone survived, of all the numerous posterity of Constantius
Chlorus. The misfortune of his royal birth involved him in the disgrace of Gallus. From his
retirement in the happy country of Ionia, he was conveyed under a strong guard to the court of
Milan; where he languished above seven months, in the continual apprehension of suffering the
same ignominious death, which was daily inflicted almost before his eyes, on the friends and
adherents of his persecuted family. His looks, his gestures, his silence, were scrutinized with
malignant curiosity, and he was perpetually assaulted by enemies whom he had never offended,
and by arts to which he was a stranger. But in the school of adversity, Julian insensibly acquired
the virtues of firmness and discretion. He defended his honor, as well as his life, against the
insnaring subtleties of the eunuchs, who endeavored to extort some declaration of his
sentiments; and whilst he cautiously suppressed his grief and resentment, he nobly disdained to
flatter the tyrant, by any seeming approbation of his brother's murder. Julian most devoutly
ascribes his miraculous deliverance to the protection of the gods, who had exempted his
innocence from the sentence of destruction pronounced by their justice against the impious
house of Constantine. As the most effectual instrument of their providence, he gratefully
acknowledges the steady and generous friendship of the empress Eusebia, a woman of beauty
and merit, who, by the ascendant which she had gained over the mind of her husband,
counterbalanced, in some measure, the powerful conspiracy of the eunuchs. By the intercession
of his patroness, Julian was admitted into the Imperial presence: he pleaded his cause with a
decent freedom, he was heard with favor; and, notwithstanding the efforts of his enemies, who
urged the danger of sparing an avenger of the blood of Gallus, the milder sentiment of Eusebia
prevailed in the council. But the effects of a second interview were dreaded by the eunuchs; and
Julian was advised to withdraw for a while into the neighborhood of Milan, till the emperor
thought proper to assign the city of Athens for the place of his honorable exile. As he had
discovered, from his earliest youth, a propensity, or rather passion, for the language, the
manners, the learning, and the religion of the Greeks, he obeyed with pleasure an order so
agreeable to his wishes. Far from the tumult of arms, and the treachery of courts, he spent six
months under the groves of the academy, in a free intercourse with the philosophers of the age,
who studied to cultivate the genius, to encourage the vanity, and to inflame the devotion of their
royal pupil. Their labors were not unsuccessful; and Julian inviolably preserved for Athens that
tender regard which seldom fails to arise in a liberal mind, from the recollection of the place
where it has discovered and exercised its growing powers. The gentleness and affability of
manners, which his temper suggested and his situation imposed, insensibly engaged the
affections of the strangers, as well as citizens, with whom he conversed. Some of his
fellow-students might perhaps examine his behavior with an eye of prejudice and aversion; but
Julian established, in the schools of Athens, a general prepossession in favor of his virtues and
talents, which was soon diffused over the Roman world.
Whilst his hours were passed in studious retirement, the empress, resolute to achieve the
generous design which she had undertaken, was not unmindful of the care of his fortune. The
death of the late Cæsar had left Constantius invested with the sole command, and oppressed by
the accumulated weight, of a mighty empire. Before the wounds of civil discord could be healed,
the provinces of Gaul were overwhelmed by a deluge of Barbarians. The Sarmatians no longer
respected the barrier of the Danube. The impunity of rapine had increased the boldness and
numbers of the wild Isaurians: those robbers descended from their craggy mountains to ravage
the adjacent country, and had even presumed, though without success, to besiege the important
city of Seleucia, which was defended by a garrison of three Roman legions. Above all, the
Persian monarch, elated by victory, again threatened the peace of Asia, and the presence of the
emperor was indispensably required, both in the West and in the East. For the first time,
Constantius sincerely acknowledged, that his single strength was unequal to such an extent of
care and of dominion. Insensible to the voice of flattery, which assured him that his all-powerful
virtue, and celestial fortune, would still continue to triumph over every obstacle, he listened with
complacency to the advice of Eusebia, which gratified his indolence, without offending his
suspicious pride. As she perceived that the remembrance of Gallus dwelt on the emperor's mind,
she artfully turned his attention to the opposite characters of the two brothers, which from their
infancy had been compared to those of Domitian and of Titus. She accustomed her husband to
consider Julian as a youth of a mild, unambitious disposition, whose allegiance and gratitude
might be secured by the gift of the purple, and who was qualified to fill with honor a subordinate
station, without aspiring to dispute the commands, or to shade the glories, of his sovereign and
benefactor. After an obstinate, though secret struggle, the opposition of the favorite eunuchs
submitted to the ascendency of the empress; and it was resolved that Julian, after celebrating his
nuptials with Helena, sister of Constantius, should be appointed, with the title of Cæsar, to reign
over the countries beyond the Alps.
Although the order which recalled him to court was probably accompanied by some intimation
of his approaching greatness, he appeals to the people of Athens to witness his tears of
undissembled sorrow, when he was reluctantly torn away from his beloved retirement. He
trembled for his life, for his fame, and even for his virtue; and his sole confidence was derived
from the persuasion, that Minerva inspired all his actions, and that he was protected by an
invisible guard of angels, whom for that purpose she had borrowed from the Sun and Moon. He
approached, with horror, the palace of Milan; nor could the ingenuous youth conceal his
indignation, when he found himself accosted with false and servile respect by the assassins of
his family. Eusebia, rejoicing in the success of her benevolent schemes, embraced him with the
tenderness of a sister; and endeavored, by the most soothing caresses, to dispel his terrors, and
reconcile him to his fortune. But the ceremony of shaving his beard, and his awkward demeanor,
when he first exchanged the cloak of a Greek philosopher for the military habit of a Roman
prince, amused, during a few days, the levity of the Imperial court.
The emperors of the age of Constantine no longer deigned to consult with the senate in the
choice of a colleague; but they were anxious that their nomination should be ratified by the
consent of the army. On this solemn occasion, the guards, with the other troops whose stations
were in the neighborhood of Milan, appeared under arms; and Constantius ascended his lofty
tribunal, holding by the hand his cousin Julian, who entered the same day into the twenty-fifth
year of his age. In a studied speech, conceived and delivered with dignity, the emperor
represented the various dangers which threatened the prosperity of the republic, the necessity of
naming a Cæsar for the administration of the West, and his own intention, if it was agreeable to
their wishes, of rewarding with the honors of the purple the promising virtues of the nephew of
Constantine. The approbation of the soldiers was testified by a respectful murmur; they gazed on
the manly countenance of Julian, and observed with pleasure, that the fire which sparkled in his
eyes was tempered by a modest blush, on being thus exposed, for the first time, to the public
view of mankind. As soon as the ceremony of his investiture had been performed, Constantius
addressed him with the tone of authority which his superior age and station permitted him to
assume; and exhorting the new Cæsar to deserve, by heroic deeds, that sacred and immortal
name, the emperor gave his colleague the strongest assurances of a friendship which should
never be impaired by time, nor interrupted by their separation into the most distant climes. As
soon as the speech was ended, the troops, as a token of applause, clashed their shields against
their knees; while the officers who surrounded the tribunal expressed, with decent reserve, their
sense of the merits of the representative of Constantius.
The two princes returned to the palace in the same chariot; and during the slow procession,
Julian repeated to himself a verse of his favorite Homer, which he might equally apply to his
fortune and to his fears. The four-and-twenty days which the Cæsar spent at Milan after his
investiture, and the first months of his Gallic reign, were devoted to a splendid but severe
captivity; nor could the acquisition of honor compensate for the loss of freedom. His steps were
watched, his correspondence was intercepted; and he was obliged, by prudence, to decline the
visits of his most intimate friends. Of his former domestics, four only were permitted to attend
him; two pages, his physician, and his librarian; the last of whom was employed in the care of a
valuable collection of books, the gift of the empress, who studied the inclinations as well as the
interest of her friend. In the room of these faithful servants, a household was formed, such
indeed as became the dignity of a Cæsar; but it was filled with a crowd of slaves, destitute, and
perhaps incapable, of any attachment for their new master, to whom, for the most part, they were
either unknown or suspected. His want of experience might require the assistance of a wise
council; but the minute instructions which regulated the service of his table, and the distribution
of his hours, were adapted to a youth still under the discipline of his preceptors, rather than to
the situation of a prince intrusted with the conduct of an important war. If he aspired to deserve
the esteem of his subjects, he was checked by the fear of displeasing his sovereign; and even the
fruits of his marriage-bed were blasted by the jealous artifices of Eusebia herself, who, on this
occasion alone, seems to have been unmindful of the tenderness of her sex, and the generosity of
her character. The memory of his father and of his brothers reminded Julian of his own danger,
and his apprehensions were increased by the recent and unworthy fate of Sylvanus. In the
summer which preceded his own elevation, that general had been chosen to deliver Gaul from
the tyranny of the Barbarians; but Sylvanus soon discovered that he had left his most dangerous
enemies in the Imperial court. A dexterous informer, countenanced by several of the principal
ministers, procured from him some recommendatory letters; and erasing the whole of the
contents, except the signature, filled up the vacant parchment with matters of high and
treasonable import. By the industry and courage of his friends, the fraud was however detected,
and in a great council of the civil and military officers, held in the presence of the emperor
himself, the innocence of Sylvanus was publicly acknowledged. But the discovery came too late;
the report of the calumny, and the hasty seizure of his estate, had already provoked the indignant
chief to the rebellion of which he was so unjustly accused. He assumed the purple at his
head-quarters of Cologne, and his active powers appeared to menace Italy with an invasion, and
Milan with a siege. In this emergency, Ursicinus, a general of equal rank, regained, by an act of
treachery, the favor which he had lost by his eminent services in the East. Exasperated, as he
might speciously allege, by the injuries of a similar nature, he hastened with a few followers to
join the standard, and to betray the confidence, of his too credulous friend. After a reign of only
twenty-eight days, Sylvanus was assassinated: the soldiers who, without any criminal intention,
had blindly followed the example of their leader, immediately returned to their allegiance; and
the flatterers of Constantius celebrated the wisdom and felicity of the monarch who had
extinguished a civil war without the hazard of a battle.
The protection of the Rhætian frontier, and the persecution of the Catholic church, detained
Constantius in Italy above eighteen months after the departure of Julian. Before the emperor
returned into the East, he indulged his pride and curiosity in a visit to the ancient capital. He
proceeded from Milan to Rome along the Æmilian and Flaminian ways, and as soon as he
approached within forty miles of the city, the march of a prince who had never vanquished a
foreign enemy, assumed the appearance of a triumphal procession. His splendid train was
composed of all the ministers of luxury; but in a time of profound peace, he was encompassed
by the glittering arms of the numerous squadrons of his guards and cuirassiers. Their streaming
banners of silk, embossed with gold, and shaped in the form of dragons, waved round the person
of the emperor. Constantius sat alone in a lofty car, resplendent with gold and precious gems;
and, except when he bowed his head to pass under the gates of the cities, he affected a stately
demeanor of inflexible, and, as it might seem, of insensible gravity. The severe discipline of the
Persian youth had been introduced by the eunuchs into the Imperial palace; and such were the
habits of patience which they had inculcated, that during a slow and sultry march, he was never
seen to move his hand towards his face, or to turn his eyes either to the right or to the left. He
was received by the magistrates and senate of Rome; and the emperor surveyed, with attention,
the civil honors of the republic, and the consular images of the noble families. The streets were
lined with an innumerable multitude. Their repeated acclamations expressed their joy at
beholding, after an absence of thirty-two years, the sacred person of their sovereign, and
Constantius himself expressed, with some pleasantry, he affected surprise that the human race
should thus suddenly be collected on the same spot. The son of Constantine was lodged in the
ancient palace of Augustus: he presided in the senate, harangued the people from the tribunal
which Cicero had so often ascended, assisted with unusual courtesy at the games of the Circus,
and accepted the crowns of gold, as well as the Panegyrics which had been prepared for the
ceremony by the deputies of the principal cities. His short visit of thirty days was employed in
viewing the monuments of art and power which were scattered over the seven hills and the
interjacent valleys. He admired the awful majesty of the Capitol, the vast extent of the baths of
Caracalla and Diocletian, the severe simplicity of the Pantheon, the massy greatness of the
amphitheatre of Titus, the elegant architecture of the theatre of Pompey and the Temple of
Peace, and, above all, the stately structure of the Forum and column of Trajan; acknowledging
that the voice of fame, so prone to invent and to magnify, had made an inadequate report of the
metropolis of the world. The traveller, who has contemplated the ruins of ancient Rome, may
conceive some imperfect idea of the sentiments which they must have inspired when they reared
their heads in the splendor of unsullied beauty.
[See The Pantheon: The severe simplicity of the Pantheon]
The satisfaction which Constantius had received from this journey excited him to the generous
emulation of bestowing on the Romans some memorial of his own gratitude and munificence.
His first idea was to imitate the equestrian and colossal statue which he had seen in the Forum of
Trajan; but when he had maturely weighed the difficulties of the execution, he chose rather to
embellish the capital by the gift of an Egyptian obelisk. In a remote but polished age, which
seems to have preceded the invention of alphabetical writing, a great number of these obelisks
had been erected, in the cities of Thebes and Heliopolis, by the ancient sovereigns of Egypt, in a
just confidence that the simplicity of their form, and the hardness of their substance, would resist
the injuries of time and violence. Several of these extraordinary columns had been transported
to Rome by Augustus and his successors, as the most durable monuments of their power and
victory; but there remained one obelisk, which, from its size or sanctity, escaped for a long time
the rapacious vanity of the conquerors. It was designed by Constantine to adorn his new city;
and, after being removed by his order from the pedestal where it stood before the Temple of the
Sun at Heliopolis, was floated down the Nile to Alexandria. The death of Constantine suspended
the execution of his purpose, and this obelisk was destined by his son to the ancient capital of
the empire. A vessel of uncommon strength and capaciousness was provided to convey this
enormous weight of granite, at least a hundred and fifteen feet in length, from the banks of the
Nile to those of the Tyber. The obelisk of Constantius was landed about three miles from the
city, and elevated, by the efforts of art and labor, in the great Circus of Rome.
The departure of Constantius from Rome was hastened by the alarming intelligence of the
distress and danger of the Illyrian provinces. The distractions of civil war, and the irreparable
loss which the Roman legions had sustained in the battle of Mursa, exposed those countries,
almost without defence, to the light cavalry of the Barbarians; and particularly to the inroads of
the Quadi, a fierce and powerful nation, who seem to have exchanged the institutions of
Germany for the arms and military arts of their Sarmatian allies. The garrisons of the frontiers
were insufficient to check their progress; and the indolent monarch was at length compelled to
assemble, from the extremities of his dominions, the flower of the Palatine troops, to take the
field in person, and to employ a whole campaign, with the preceding autumn and the ensuing
spring, in the serious prosecution of the war. The emperor passed the Danube on a bridge of
boats, cut in pieces all that encountered his march, penetrated into the heart of the country of the
Quadi, and severely retaliated the calamities which they had inflicted on the Roman province.
The dismayed Barbarians were soon reduced to sue for peace: they offered the restitution of his
captive subjects as an atonement for the past, and the noblest hostages as a pledge of their future
conduct. The generous courtesy which was shown to the first among their chieftains who
implored the clemency of Constantius, encouraged the more timid, or the more obstinate, to
imitate their example; and the Imperial camp was crowded with the princes and ambassadors of
the most distant tribes, who occupied the plains of the Lesser Poland, and who might have
deemed themselves secure behind the lofty ridge of the Carpathian Mountains. While
Constantius gave laws to the Barbarians beyond the Danube, he distinguished, with specious
compassion, the Sarmatian exiles, who had been expelled from their native country by the
rebellion of their slaves, and who formed a very considerable accession to the power of the
Quadi. The emperor, embracing a generous but artful system of policy, released the Sarmatians
from the bands of this humiliating dependence, and restored them, by a separate treaty, to the
dignity of a nation united under the government of a king, the friend and ally of the republic. He
declared his resolution of asserting the justice of their cause, and of securing the peace of the
provinces by the extirpation, or at least the banishment, of the Limigantes, whose manners were
still infected with the vices of their servile origin. The execution of this design was attended with
more difficulty than glory. The territory of the Limigantes was protected against the Romans by
the Danube, against the hostile Barbarians by the Teyss. The marshy lands which lay between
those rivers, and were often covered by their inundations, formed an intricate wilderness,
pervious only to the inhabitants, who were acquainted with its secret paths and inaccessible
fortresses. On the approach of Constantius, the Limigantes tried the efficacy of prayers, of fraud,
and of arms; but he sternly rejected their supplications, defeated their rude stratagems, and
repelled with skill and firmness the efforts of their irregular valor. One of their most warlike
tribes, established in a small island towards the conflux of the Teyss and the Danube, consented
to pass the river with the intention of surprising the emperor during the security of an amicable
conference. They soon became the victims of the perfidy which they meditated. Encompassed on
every side, trampled down by the cavalry, slaughtered by the swords of the legions, they
disdained to ask for mercy; and with an undaunted countenance, still grasped their weapons in
the agonies of death. After this victory, a considerable body of Romans was landed on the
opposite banks of the Danube; the Taifalæ, a Gothic tribe engaged in the service of the empire,
invaded the Limigantes on the side of the Teyss; and their former masters, the free Sarmatians,
animated by hope and revenge, penetrated through the hilly country, into the heart of their
ancient possessions. A general conflagration revealed the huts of the Barbarians, which were
seated in the depth of the wilderness; and the soldier fought with confidence on marshy ground,
which it was dangerous for him to tread. In this extremity, the bravest of the Limigantes were
resolved to die in arms, rather than to yield: but the milder sentiment, enforced by the authority
of their elders, at length prevailed; and the suppliant crowd, followed by their wives and
children, repaired to the Imperial camp, to learn their fate from the mouth of the conqueror.
After celebrating his own clemency, which was still inclined to pardon their repeated crimes,
and to spare the remnant of a guilty nation, Constantius assigned for the place of their exile a
remote country, where they might enjoy a safe and honorable repose. The Limigantes obeyed
with reluctance; but before they could reach, at least before they could occupy, their destined
habitations, they returned to the banks of the Danube, exaggerating the hardships of their
situation, and requesting, with fervent professions of fidelity, that the emperor would grant them
an undisturbed settlement within the limits of the Roman provinces. Instead of consulting his
own experience of their incurable perfidy, Constantius listened to his flatterers, who were ready
to represent the honor and advantage of accepting a colony of soldiers, at a time when it was
much easier to obtain the pecuniary contributions than the military service of the subjects of the
empire. The Limigantes were permitted to pass the Danube; and the emperor gave audience to
the multitude in a large plain near the modern city of Buda. They surrounded the tribunal, and
seemed to hear with respect an oration full of mildness and dignity when one of the Barbarians,
casting his shoe into the air, exclaimed with a loud voice, Marha! Marha! * a word of defiance,
which was received as a signal of the tumult. They rushed with fury to seize the person of the
emperor; his royal throne and golden couch were pillaged by these rude hands; but the faithful
defence of his guards, who died at his feet, allowed him a moment to mount a fleet horse, and to
escape from the confusion. The disgrace which had been incurred by a treacherous surprise was
soon retrieved by the numbers and discipline of the Romans; and the combat was only
terminated by the extinction of the name and nation of the Limigantes. The free Sarmatians were
reinstated in the possession of their ancient seats; and although Constantius distrusted the levity
of their character, he entertained some hopes that a sense of gratitude might influence their
future conduct. He had remarked the lofty stature and obsequious demeanor of Zizais, one of the
noblest of their chiefs. He conferred on him the title of King; and Zizais proved that he was not
unworthy to reign, by a sincere and lasting attachment to the interests of his benefactor, who,
after this splendid success, received the name of Sarmaticus from the acclamations of his
victorious army.
Chapter XIX: Constantius Sole Emperor. -- Part III.
While the Roman emperor and the Persian monarch, at the distance of three thousand miles,
defended their extreme limits against the Barbarians of the Danube and of the Oxus, their
intermediate frontier experienced the vicissitudes of a languid war, and a precarious truce. Two
of the eastern ministers of Constantius, the Prætorian præfect Musonian, whose abilities were
disgraced by the want of truth and integrity, and Cassian, duke of Mesopotamia, a hardy and
veteran soldier, opened a secret negotiation with the satrap Tamsapor. These overtures of
peace, translated into the servile and flattering language of Asia, were transmitted to the camp of
the Great King; who resolved to signify, by an ambassador, the terms which he was inclined to
grant to the suppliant Romans. Narses, whom he invested with that character, was honorably
received in his passage through Antioch and Constantinople: he reached Sirmium after a long
journey, and, at his first audience, respectfully unfolded the silken veil which covered the
haughty epistle of his sovereign. Sapor, King of Kings, and Brother of the Sun and Moon, (such
were the lofty titles affected by Oriental vanity,) expressed his satisfaction that his brother,
Constantius Cæsar, had been taught wisdom by adversity. As the lawful successor of Darius
Hystaspes, Sapor asserted, that the River Strymon, in Macedonia, was the true and ancient
boundary of his empire; declaring, however, that as an evidence of his moderation, he would
content himself with the provinces of Armenia and Mesopotamia, which had been fraudulently
extorted from his ancestors. He alleged, that, without the restitution of these disputed countries,
it was impossible to establish any treaty on a solid and permanent basis; and he arrogantly
threatened, that if his ambassador returned in vain, he was prepared to take the field in the
spring, and to support the justice of his cause by the strength of his invincible arms. Narses, who
was endowed with the most polite and amiable manners, endeavored, as far as was consistent
with his duty, to soften the harshness of the message. Both the style and substance were
maturely weighed in the Imperial council, and he was dismissed with the following answer:
"Constantius had a right to disclaim the officiousness of his ministers, who had acted without
any specific orders from the throne: he was not, however, averse to an equal and honorable
treaty; but it was highly indecent, as well as absurd, to propose to the sole and victorious
emperor of the Roman world, the same conditions of peace which he had indignantly rejected at
the time when his power was contracted within the narrow limits of the East: the chance of arms
was uncertain; and Sapor should recollect, that if the Romans had sometimes been vanquished in
battle, they had almost always been successful in the event of the war." A few days after the
departure of Narses, three ambassadors were sent to the court of Sapor, who was already
returned from the Scythian expedition to his ordinary residence of Ctesiphon. A count, a notary,
and a sophist, had been selected for this important commission; and Constantius, who was
secretly anxious for the conclusion of the peace, entertained some hopes that the dignity of the
first of these ministers, the dexterity of the second, and the rhetoric of the third, would persuade
the Persian monarch to abate of the rigor of his demands. But the progress of their negotiation
was opposed and defeated by the hostile arts of Antoninus, a Roman subject of Syria, who had
fled from oppression, and was admitted into the councils of Sapor, and even to the royal table,
where, according to the custom of the Persians, the most important business was frequently
discussed. The dexterous fugitive promoted his interest by the same conduct which gratified his
revenge. He incessantly urged the ambition of his new master to embrace the favorable
opportunity when the bravest of the Palatine troops were employed with the emperor in a distant
war on the Danube. He pressed Sapor to invade the exhausted and defenceless provinces of the
East, with the numerous armies of Persia, now fortified by the alliance and accession of the
fiercest Barbarians. The ambassadors of Rome retired without success, and a second embassy, of
a still more honorable rank, was detained in strict confinement, and threatened either with death
or exile.
The military historian, who was himself despatched to observe the army of the Persians, as they
were preparing to construct a bridge of boats over the Tigris, beheld from an eminence the plain
of Assyria, as far as the edge of the horizon, covered with men, with horses, and with arms.
Sapor appeared in the front, conspicuous by the splendor of his purple. On his left hand, the
place of honor among the Orientals, Grumbates, king of the Chionites, displayed the stern
countenance of an aged and renowned warrior. The monarch had reserved a similar place on his
right hand for the king of the Albanians, who led his independent tribes from the shores of the
Caspian. * The satraps and generals were distributed according to their several ranks, and the
whole army, besides the numerous train of Oriental luxury, consisted of more than one hundred
thousand effective men, inured to fatigue, and selected from the bravest nations of Asia. The
Roman deserter, who in some measure guided the councils of Sapor, had prudently advised, that,
instead of wasting the summer in tedious and difficult sieges, he should march directly to the
Euphrates, and press forwards without delay to seize the feeble and wealthy metropolis of Syria.
But the Persians were no sooner advanced into the plains of Mesopotamia, than they discovered
that every precaution had been used which could retard their progress, or defeat their design. The
inhabitants, with their cattle, were secured in places of strength, the green forage throughout the
country was set on fire, the fords of the rivers were fortified by sharp stakes; military engines
were planted on the opposite banks, and a seasonable swell of the waters of the Euphrates
deterred the Barbarians from attempting the ordinary passage of the bridge of Thapsacus. Their
skilful guide, changing his plan of operations, then conducted the army by a longer circuit, but
through a fertile territory, towards the head of the Euphrates, where the infant river is reduced to
a shallow and accessible stream. Sapor overlooked, with prudent disdain, the strength of Nisibis;
but as he passed under the walls of Amida, he resolved to try whether the majesty of his presence
would not awe the garrison into immediate submission. The sacrilegious insult of a random dart,
which glanced against the royal tiara, convinced him of his error; and the indignant monarch
listened with impatience to the advice of his ministers, who conjured him not to sacrifice the
success of his ambition to the gratification of his resentment. The following day Grumbates
advanced towards the gates with a select body of troops, and required the instant surrender of the
city, as the only atonement which could be accepted for such an act of rashness and insolence.
His proposals were answered by a general discharge, and his only son, a beautiful and valiant
youth, was pierced through the heart by a javelin, shot from one of the balistæ. The funeral of
the prince of the Chionites was celebrated according to the rites of the country; and the grief of
his aged father was alleviated by the solemn promise of Sapor, that the guilty city of Amida
should serve as a funeral pile to expiate the death, and to perpetuate the memory, of his son.
The ancient city of Amid or Amida, which sometimes assumes the provincial appellation of
Diarbekir, is advantageously situate in a fertile plain, watered by the natural and artificial
channels of the Tigris, of which the least inconsiderable stream bends in a semicircular form
round the eastern part of the city. The emperor Constantius had recently conferred on Amida the
honor of his own name, and the additional fortifications of strong walls and lofty towers. It was
provided with an arsenal of military engines, and the ordinary garrison had been reenforced to
the amount of seven legions, when the place was invested by the arms of Sapor. His first and
most sanguine hopes depended on the success of a general assault. To the several nations which
followed his standard, their respective posts were assigned; the south to the Vertæ; the north to
the Albanians; the east to the Chionites, inflamed with grief and indignation; the west to the
Segestans, the bravest of his warriors, who covered their front with a formidable line of Indian
elephants. The Persians, on every side, supported their efforts, and animated their courage; and
the monarch himself, careless of his rank and safety, displayed, in the prosecution of the siege,
the ardor of a youthful soldier. After an obstinate combat, the Barbarians were repulsed; they
incessantly returned to the charge; they were again driven back with a dreadful slaughter, and
two rebel legions of Gauls, who had been banished into the East, signalized their undisciplined
courage by a nocturnal sally into the heart of the Persian camp. In one of the fiercest of these
repeated assaults, Amida was betrayed by the treachery of a deserter, who indicated to the
Barbarians a secret and neglected staircase, scooped out of the rock that hangs over the stream of
the Tigris. Seventy chosen archers of the royal guard ascended in silence to the third story of a
lofty tower, which commanded the precipice; they elevated on high the Persian banner, the
signal of confidence to the assailants, and of dismay to the besieged; and if this devoted band
could have maintained their post a few minutes longer, the reduction of the place might have
been purchased by the sacrifice of their lives. After Sapor had tried, without success, the efficacy
of force and of stratagem, he had recourse to the slower but more certain operations of a regular
siege, in the conduct of which he was instructed by the skill of the Roman deserters. The
trenches were opened at a convenient distance, and the troops destined for that service advanced
under the portable cover of strong hurdles, to fill up the ditch, and undermine the foundations of
the walls. Wooden towers were at the same time constructed, and moved forwards on wheels, till
the soldiers, who were provided with every species of missile weapons, could engage almost on
level ground with the troops who defended the rampart. Every mode of resistance which art
could suggest, or courage could execute, was employed in the defence of Amida, and the works
of Sapor were more than once destroyed by the fire of the Romans. But the resources of a
besieged city may be exhausted. The Persians repaired their losses, and pushed their approaches;
a large preach was made by the battering-ram, and the strength of the garrison, wasted by the
sword and by disease, yielded to the fury of the assault. The soldiers, the citizens, their wives,
their children, all who had not time to escape through the opposite gate, were involved by the
conquerors in a promiscuous massacre.
But the ruin of Amida was the safety of the Roman provinces. As soon as the first transports of
victory had subsided, Sapor was at leisure to reflect, that to chastise a disobedient city, he had
lost the flower of his troops, and the most favorable season for conquest. Thirty thousand of his
veterans had fallen under the walls of Amida, during the continuance of a siege, which lasted
seventy-three days; and the disappointed monarch returned to his capital with affected triumph
and secret mortification. It is more than probable, that the inconstancy of his Barbarian allies
was tempted to relinquish a war in which they had encountered such unexpected difficulties; and
that the aged king of the Chionites, satiated with revenge, turned away with horror from a scene
of action where he had been deprived of the hope of his family and nation. The strength as well
as the spirit of the army with which Sapor took the field in the ensuing spring was no longer
equal to the unbounded views of his ambition. Instead of aspiring to the conquest of the East, he
was obliged to content himself with the reduction of two fortified cities of Mesopotamia,
Singara and Bezabde; the one situate in the midst of a sandy desert, the other in a small
peninsula, surrounded almost on every side by the deep and rapid stream of the Tigris. Five
Roman legions, of the diminutive size to which they had been reduced in the age of Constantine,
were made prisoners, and sent into remote captivity on the extreme confines of Persia. After
dismantling the walls of Singara, the conqueror abandoned that solitary and sequestered place;
but he carefully restored the fortifications of Bezabde, and fixed in that important post a garrison
or colony of veterans; amply supplied with every means of defence, and animated by high
sentiments of honor and fidelity. Towards the close of the campaign, the arms of Sapor incurred
some disgrace by an unsuccessful enterprise against Virtha, or Tecrit, a strong, or, as it was
universally esteemed till the age of Tamerlane, an impregnable fortress of the independent
Arabs.
The defence of the East against the arms of Sapor required and would have exercised, the
abilities of the most consummate general; and it seemed fortunate for the state, that it was the
actual province of the brave Ursicinus, who alone deserved the confidence of the soldiers and
people. In the hour of danger, Ursicinus was removed from his station by the intrigues of the
eunuchs; and the military command of the East was bestowed, by the same influence, on
Sabinian, a wealthy and subtle veteran, who had attained the infirmities, without acquiring the
experience, of age. By a second order, which issued from the same jealous and inconstant
councils, Ursicinus was again despatched to the frontier of Mesopotamia, and condemned to
sustain the labors of a war, the honors of which had been transferred to his unworthy rival.
Sabinian fixed his indolent station under the walls of Edessa; and while he amused himself with
the idle parade of military exercise, and moved to the sound of flutes in the Pyrrhic dance, the
public defence was abandoned to the boldness and diligence of the former general of the East.
But whenever Ursicinus recommended any vigorous plan of operations; when he proposed, at
the head of a light and active army, to wheel round the foot of the mountains, to intercept the
convoys of the enemy, to harass the wide extent of the Persian lines, and to relieve the distress of
Amida; the timid and envious commander alleged, that he was restrained by his positive orders
from endangering the safety of the troops. Amida was at length taken; its bravest defenders, who
had escaped the sword of the Barbarians, died in the Roman camp by the hand of the
executioner: and Ursicinus himself, after supporting the disgrace of a partial inquiry, was
punished for the misconduct of Sabinian by the loss of his military rank. But Constantius soon
experienced the truth of the prediction which honest indignation had extorted from his injured
lieutenant, that as long as such maxims of government were suffered to prevail, the emperor
himself would find it is no easy task to defend his eastern dominions from the invasion of a
foreign enemy. When he had subdued or pacified the Barbarians of the Danube, Constantius
proceeded by slow marches into the East; and after he had wept over the smoking ruins of
Amida, he formed, with a powerful army, the siege of Bezabde. The walls were shaken by the
reiterated efforts of the most enormous of the battering-rams; the town was reduced to the last
extremity; but it was still defended by the patient and intrepid valor of the garrison, till the
approach of the rainy season obliged the emperor to raise the siege, and ingloriously to retreat
into his winter quarters at Antioch. The pride of Constantius, and the ingenuity of his courtiers,
were at a loss to discover any materials for panegyric in the events of the Persian war; while the
glory of his cousin Julian, to whose military command he had intrusted the provinces of Gaul,
was proclaimed to the world in the simple and concise narrative of his exploits.
In the blind fury of civil discord, Constantius had abandoned to the Barbarians of Germany the
countries of Gaul, which still acknowledged the authority of his rival. A numerous swarm of
Franks and Alemanni were invited to cross the Rhine by presents and promises, by the hopes of
spoil, and by a perpetual grant of all the territories which they should be able to subdue. But the
emperor, who for a temporary service had thus imprudently provoked the rapacious spirit of the
Barbarians, soon discovered and lamented the difficulty of dismissing these formidable allies,
after they had tasted the richness of the Roman soil. Regardless of the nice distinction of loyalty
and rebellion, these undisciplined robbers treated as their natural enemies all the subjects of the
empire, who possessed any property which they were desirous of acquiring Forty-five flourishing
cities, Tongres, Cologne, Treves, Worms, Spires, Strasburgh, &c., besides a far greater number
of towns and villages, were pillaged, and for the most part reduced to ashes. The Barbarians of
Germany, still faithful to the maxims of their ancestors, abhorred the confinement of walls, to
which they applied the odious names of prisons and sepulchres; and fixing their independent
habitations on the banks of rivers, the Rhine, the Moselle, and the Meuse, they secured
themselves against the danger of a surprise, by a rude and hasty fortification of large trees, which
were felled and thrown across the roads. The Alemanni were established in the modern countries
of Alsace and Lorraine; the Franks occupied the island of the Batavians, together with an
extensive district of Brabant, which was then known by the appellation of Toxandria, and may
deserve to be considered as the original seat of their Gallic monarchy. From the sources, to the
mouth, of the Rhine, the conquests of the Germans extended above forty miles to the west of that
river, over a country peopled by colonies of their own name and nation: and the scene of their
devastations was three times more extensive than that of their conquests. At a still greater
distance the open towns of Gaul were deserted, and the inhabitants of the fortified cities, who
trusted to their strength and vigilance, were obliged to content themselves with such supplies of
corn as they could raise on the vacant land within the enclosure of their walls. The diminished
legions, destitute of pay and provisions, of arms and discipline, trembled at the approach, and
even at the name, of the Barbarians.
Chapter XIX: Constantius Sole Emperor. -- Part IV.
Under these melancholy circumstances, an unexperienced youth was appointed to save and to
govern the provinces of Gaul, or rather, as he expressed it himself, to exhibit the vain image of
Imperial greatness. The retired scholastic education of Julian, in which he had been more
conversant with books than with arms, with the dead than with the living, left him in profound
ignorance of the practical arts of war and government; and when he awkwardly repeated some
military exercise which it was necessary for him to learn, he exclaimed with a sigh, "O Plato,
Plato, what a task for a philosopher!" Yet even this speculative philosophy, which men of
business are too apt to despise, had filled the mind of Julian with the noblest precepts and the
most shining examples; had animated him with the love of virtue, the desire of fame, and the
contempt of death. The habits of temperance recommended in the schools, are still more
essential in the severe discipline of a camp. The simple wants of nature regulated the measure of
his food and sleep. Rejecting with disdain the delicacies provided for his table, he satisfied his
appetite with the coarse and common fare which was allotted to the meanest soldiers. During the
rigor of a Gallic winter, he never suffered a fire in his bed-chamber; and after a short and
interrupted slumber, he frequently rose in the middle of the night from a carpet spread on the
floor, to despatch any urgent business, to visit his rounds, or to steal a few moments for the
prosecution of his favorite studies. The precepts of eloquence, which he had hitherto practised
on fancied topics of declamation, were more usefully applied to excite or to assuage the passions
of an armed multitude: and although Julian, from his early habits of conversation and literature,
was more familiarly acquainted with the beauties of the Greek language, he had attained a
competent knowledge of the Latin tongue. Since Julian was not originally designed for the
character of a legislator, or a judge, it is probable that the civil jurisprudence of the Romans had
not engaged any considerable share of his attention: but he derived from his philosophic studies
an inflexible regard for justice, tempered by a disposition to clemency; the knowledge of the
general principles of equity and evidence, and the faculty of patiently investigating the most
intricate and tedious questions which could be proposed for his discussion. The measures of
policy, and the operations of war, must submit to the various accidents of circumstance and
character, and the unpractised student will often be perplexed in the application of the most
perfect theory. But in the acquisition of this important science, Julian was assisted by the active
vigor of his own genius, as well as by the wisdom and experience of Sallust, and officer of rank,
who soon conceived a sincere attachment for a prince so worthy of his friendship; and whose
incorruptible integrity was adorned by the talent of insinuating the harshest truths without
wounding the delicacy of a royal ear.
Immediately after Julian had received the purple at Milan, he was sent into Gaul with a feeble
retinue of three hundred and sixty soldiers. At Vienna, where he passed a painful and anxious
winter in the hands of those ministers to whom Constantius had intrusted the direction of his
conduct, the Cæsar was informed of the siege and deliverance of Autun. That large and ancient
city, protected only by a ruined wall and pusillanimous garrison, was saved by the generous
resolution of a few veterans, who resumed their arms for the defence of their country. In his
march from Autun, through the heart of the Gallic provinces, Julian embraced with ardor the
earliest opportunity of signalizing his courage. At the head of a small body of archers and heavy
cavalry, he preferred the shorter but the more dangerous of two roads; * and sometimes eluding,
and sometimes resisting, the attacks of the Barbarians, who were masters of the field, he arrived
with honor and safety at the camp near Rheims, where the Roman troops had been ordered to
assemble. The aspect of their young prince revived the drooping spirits of the soldiers, and they
marched from Rheims in search of the enemy, with a confidence which had almost proved fatal
to them. The Alemanni, familiarized to the knowledge of the country, secretly collected their
scattered forces, and seizing the opportunity of a dark and rainy day, poured with unexpected
fury on the rear-guard of the Romans. Before the inevitable disorder could be remedied, two
legions were destroyed; and Julian was taught by experience that caution and vigilance are the
most important lessons of the art of war. In a second and more successful action, * he recovered
and established his military fame; but as the agility of the Barbarians saved them from the
pursuit, his victory was neither bloody nor decisive. He advanced, however, to the banks of the
Rhine, surveyed the ruins of Cologne, convinced himself of the difficulties of the war, and
retreated on the approach of winter, discontented with the court, with his army, and with his own
success. The power of the enemy was yet unbroken; and the Cæsar had no sooner separated his
troops, and fixed his own quarters at Sens, in the centre of Gaul, than he was surrounded and
besieged, by a numerous host of Germans. Reduced, in this extremity, to the resources of his
own mind, he displayed a prudent intrepidity, which compensated for all the deficiencies of the
place and garrison; and the Barbarians, at the end of thirty days, were obliged to retire with
disappointed rage.
The conscious pride of Julian, who was indebted only to his sword for this signal deliverance,
was imbittered by the reflection, that he was abandoned, betrayed, and perhaps devoted to
destruction, by those who were bound to assist him, by every tie of honor and fidelity. Marcellus,
master-general of the cavalry in Gaul, interpreting too strictly the jealous orders of the court,
beheld with supine indifference the distress of Julian, and had restrained the troops under his
command from marching to the relief of Sens. If the Cæsar had dissembled in silence so
dangerous an insult, his person and authority would have been exposed to the contempt of the
world; and if an action so criminal had been suffered to pass with impunity, the emperor would
have confirmed the suspicions, which received a very specious color from his past conduct
towards the princes of the Flavian family. Marcellus was recalled, and gently dismissed from his
office. In his room Severus was appointed general of the cavalry; an experienced soldier, of
approved courage and fidelity, who could advise with respect, and execute with zeal; and who
submitted, without reluctance to the supreme command which Julian, by the interest of his
patroness Eusebia, at length obtained over the armies of Gaul. A very judicious plan of
operations was adopted for the approaching campaign. Julian himself, at the head of the remains
of the veteran bands, and of some new levies which he had been permitted to form, boldly
penetrated into the centre of the German cantonments, and carefully reestablished the
fortifications of Saverne, in an advantageous post, which would either check the incursions, or
intercept the retreat, of the enemy. At the same time, Barbatio, general of the infantry, advanced
from Milan with an army of thirty thousand men, and passing the mountains, prepared to throw a
bridge over the Rhine, in the neighborhood of Basil. It was reasonable to expect that the
Alemanni, pressed on either side by the Roman arms, would soon be forced to evacuate the
provinces of Gaul, and to hasten to the defence of their native country. But the hopes of the
campaign were defeated by the incapacity, or the envy, or the secret instructions, of Barbatio;
who acted as if he had been the enemy of the Cæsar, and the secret ally of the Barbarians. The
negligence with which he permitted a troop of pillagers freely to pass, and to return almost
before the gates of his camp, may be imputed to his want of abilities; but the treasonable act of
burning a number of boats, and a superfluous stock of provisions, which would have been of the
most essential service to the army of Gaul, was an evidence of his hostile and criminal
intentions. The Germans despised an enemy who appeared destitute either of power or of
inclination to offend them; and the ignominious retreat of Barbatio deprived Julian of the
expected support; and left him to extricate himself from a hazardous situation, where he could
neither remain with safety, nor retire with honor.
As soon as they were delivered from the fears of invasion, the Alemanni prepared to chastise the
Roman youth, who presumed to dispute the possession of that country, which they claimed as
their own by the right of conquest and of treaties. They employed three days, and as many nights,
in transporting over the Rhine their military powers. The fierce Chnodomar, shaking the
ponderous javelin which he had victoriously wielded against the brother of Magnentius, led the
van of the Barbarians, and moderated by his experience the martial ardor which his example
inspired. He was followed by six other kings, by ten princes of regal extraction, by a long train
of high-spirited nobles, and by thirty-five thousand of the bravest warriors of the tribes of
Germany. The confidence derived from the view of their own strength, was increased by the
intelligence which they received from a deserter, that the Cæsar, with a feeble army of thirteen
thousand men, occupied a post about one-and-twenty miles from their camp of Strasburgh. With
this inadequate force, Julian resolved to seek and to encounter the Barbarian host; and the
chance of a general action was preferred to the tedious and uncertain operation of separately
engaging the dispersed parties of the Alemanni. The Romans marched in close order, and in two
columns; the cavalry on the right, the infantry on the left; and the day was so far spent when they
appeared in sight of the enemy, that Julian was desirous of deferring the battle till the next
morning, and of allowing his troops to recruit their exhausted strength by the necessary
refreshments of sleep and food. Yielding, however, with some reluctance, to the clamors of the
soldiers, and even to the opinion of his council, he exhorted them to justify by their valor the
eager impatience, which, in case of a defeat, would be universally branded with the epithets of
rashness and presumption. The trumpets sounded, the military shout was heard through the field,
and the two armies rushed with equal fury to the charge. The Cæsar, who conducted in person
his right wing, depended on the dexterity of his archers, and the weight of his cuirassiers. But his
ranks were instantly broken by an irregular mixture of light horse and of light infantry, and he
had the mortification of beholding the flight of six hundred of his most renowned cuirassiers.
The fugitives were stopped and rallied by the presence and authority of Julian, who, careless of
his own safety, threw himself before them, and urging every motive of shame and honor, led
them back against the victorious enemy. The conflict between the two lines of infantry was
obstinate and bloody. The Germans possessed the superiority of strength and stature, the Romans
that of discipline and temper; and as the Barbarians, who served under the standard of the
empire, united the respective advantages of both parties, their strenuous efforts, guided by a
skilful leader, at length determined the event of the day. The Romans lost four tribunes, and two
hundred and forty-three soldiers, in this memorable battle of Strasburgh, so glorious to the
Cæsar, and so salutary to the afflicted provinces of Gaul. Six thousand of the Alemanni were
slain in the field, without including those who were drowned in the Rhine, or transfixed with
darts while they attempted to swim across the river. Chnodomar himself was surrounded and
taken prisoner, with three of his brave companions, who had devoted themselves to follow in life
or death the fate of their chieftain. Julian received him with military pomp in the council of his
officers; and expressing a generous pity for the fallen state, dissembled his inward contempt for
the abject humiliation, of his captive. Instead of exhibiting the vanquished king of the Alemanni,
as a grateful spectacle to the cities of Gaul, he respectfully laid at the feet of the emperor this
splendid trophy of his victory. Chnodomar experienced an honorable treatment: but the
impatient Barbarian could not long survive his defeat, his confinement, and his exile.
After Julian had repulsed the Alemanni from the provinces of the Upper Rhine, he turned his
arms against the Franks, who were seated nearer to the ocean, on the confines of Gaul and
Germany; and who, from their numbers, and still more from their intrepid valor, had ever been
esteemed the most formidable of the Barbarians. Although they were strongly actuated by the
allurements of rapine, they professed a disinterested love of war; which they considered as the
supreme honor and felicity of human nature; and their minds and bodies were so completely
hardened by perpetual action, that, according to the lively expression of an orator, the snows of
winter were as pleasant to them as the flowers of spring. In the month of December, which
followed the battle of Strasburgh, Julian attacked a body of six hundred Franks, who had thrown
themselves into two castles on the Meuse. In the midst of that severe season they sustained, with
inflexible constancy, a siege of fifty-four days; till at length, exhausted by hunger, and satisfied
that the vigilance of the enemy, in breaking the ice of the river, left them no hopes of escape, the
Franks consented, for the first time, to dispense with the ancient law which commanded them to
conquer or to die. The Cæsar immediately sent his captives to the court of Constantius, who,
accepting them as a valuable present, rejoiced in the opportunity of adding so many heroes to
the choicest troops of his domestic guards. The obstinate resistance of this handful of Franks
apprised Julian of the difficulties of the expedition which he meditated for the ensuing spring,
against the whole body of the nation. His rapid diligence surprised and astonished the active
Barbarians. Ordering his soldiers to provide themselves with biscuit for twenty days, he suddenly
pitched his camp near Tongres, while the enemy still supposed him in his winter quarters of
Paris, expecting the slow arrival of his convoys from Aquitain. Without allowing the Franks to
unite or deliberate, he skilfully spread his legions from Cologne to the ocean; and by the terror,
as well as by the success, of his arms, soon reduced the suppliant tribes to implore the clemency,
and to obey the commands, of their conqueror. The Chamavians submissively retired to their
former habitations beyond the Rhine; but the Salians were permitted to possess their new
establishment of Toxandria, as the subjects and auxiliaries of the Roman empire. The treaty was
ratified by solemn oaths; and perpetual inspectors were appointed to reside among the Franks,
with the authority of enforcing the strict observance of the conditions. An incident is related,
interesting enough in itself, and by no means repugnant to the character of Julian, who
ingeniously contrived both the plot and the catastrophe of the tragedy. When the Chamavians
sued for peace, he required the son of their king, as the only hostage on whom he could rely. A
mournful silence, interrupted by tears and groans, declared the sad perplexity of the Barbarians;
and their aged chief lamented in pathetic language, that his private loss was now imbittered by a
sense of public calamity. While the Chamavians lay prostrate at the foot of his throne, the royal
captive, whom they believed to have been slain, unexpectedly appeared before their eyes; and as
soon as the tumult of joy was hushed into attention, the Cæsar addressed the assembly in the
following terms: "Behold the son, the prince, whom you wept. You had lost him by your fault.
God and the Romans have restored him to you. I shall still preserve and educate the youth, rather
as a monument of my own virtue, than as a pledge of your sincerity. Should you presume to
violate the faith which you have sworn, the arms of the republic will avenge the perfidy, not on
the innocent, but on the guilty." The Barbarians withdrew from his presence, impressed with the
warmest sentiments of gratitude and admiration.
It was not enough for Julian to have delivered the provinces of Gaul from the Barbarians of
Germany. He aspired to emulate the glory of the first and most illustrious of the emperors; after
whose example, he composed his own commentaries of the Gallic war. Cæsar has related, with
conscious pride, the manner in which he twice passed the Rhine. Julian could boast, that before
he assumed the title of Augustus, he had carried the Roman eagles beyond that great river in
three successful expeditions. The consternation of the Germans, after the battle of Strasburgh,
encouraged him to the first attempt; and the reluctance of the troops soon yielded to the
persuasive eloquence of a leader, who shared the fatigues and dangers which he imposed on the
meanest of the soldiers. The villages on either side of the Meyn, which were plentifully stored
with corn and cattle, felt the ravages of an invading army. The principal houses, constructed with
some imitation of Roman elegance, were consumed by the flames; and the Cæsar boldly
advanced about ten miles, till his progress was stopped by a dark and impenetrable forest,
undermined by subterraneous passages, which threatened with secret snares and ambush every
step of the assailants. The ground was already covered with snow; and Julian, after repairing an
ancient castle which had been erected by Trajan, granted a truce of ten months to the submissive
Barbarians. At the expiration of the truce, Julian undertook a second expedition beyond the
Rhine, to humble the pride of Surmar and Hortaire, two of the kings of the Alemanni, who had
been present at the battle of Strasburgh. They promised to restore all the Roman captives who
yet remained alive; and as the Cæsar had procured an exact account from the cities and villages
of Gaul, of the inhabitants whom they had lost, he detected every attempt to deceive him, with a
degree of readiness and accuracy, which almost established the belief of his supernatural
knowledge. His third expedition was still more splendid and important than the two former. The
Germans had collected their military powers, and moved along the opposite banks of the river,
with a design of destroying the bridge, and of preventing the passage of the Romans. But this
judicious plan of defence was disconcerted by a skilful diversion. Three hundred light-armed
and active soldiers were detached in forty small boats, to fall down the stream in silence, and to
land at some distance from the posts of the enemy. They executed their orders with so much
boldness and celerity, that they had almost surprised the Barbarian chiefs, who returned in the
fearless confidence of intoxication from one of their nocturnal festivals. Without repeating the
uniform and disgusting tale of slaughter and devastation, it is sufficient to observe, that Julian
dictated his own conditions of peace to six of the haughtiest kings of the Alemanni, three of
whom were permitted to view the severe discipline and martial pomp of a Roman camp.
Followed by twenty thousand captives, whom he had rescued from the chains of the Barbarians,
the Cæsar repassed the Rhine, after terminating a war, the success of which has been compared
to the ancient glories of the Punic and Cimbric victories.
As soon as the valor and conduct of Julian had secured an interval of peace, he applied himself
to a work more congenial to his humane and philosophic temper. The cities of Gaul, which had
suffered from the inroads of the Barbarians, he diligently repaired; and seven important posts,
between Mentz and the mouth of the Rhine, are particularly mentioned, as having been rebuilt
and fortified by the order of Julian. The vanquished Germans had submitted to the just but
humiliating condition of preparing and conveying the necessary materials. The active zeal of
Julian urged the prosecution of the work; and such was the spirit which he had diffused among
the troops, that the auxiliaries themselves, waiving their exemption from any duties of fatigue,
contended in the most servile labors with the diligence of the Roman soldiers. It was incumbent
on the Cæsar to provide for the subsistence, as well as for the safety, of the inhabitants and of the
garrisons. The desertion of the former, and the mutiny of the latter, must have been the fatal and
inevitable consequences of famine. The tillage of the provinces of Gaul had been interrupted by
the calamities of war; but the scanty harvests of the continent were supplied, by his paternal
care, from the plenty of the adjacent island. Six hundred large barks, framed in the forest of the
Ardennes, made several voyages to the coast of Britain; and returning from thence, laden with
corn, sailed up the Rhine, and distributed their cargoes to the several towns and fortresses along
the banks of the river. The arms of Julian had restored a free and secure navigation, which
Constantius had offered to purchase at the expense of his dignity, and of a tributary present of
two thousand pounds of silver. The emperor parsimoniously refused to his soldiers the sums
which he granted with a lavish and trembling hand to the Barbarians. The dexterity, as well as
the firmness, of Julian was put to a severe trial, when he took the field with a discontented army,
which had already served two campaigns, without receiving any regular pay or any extraordinary
donative.
A tender regard for the peace and happiness of his subjects was the ruling principle which
directed, or seemed to direct, the administration of Julian. He devoted the leisure of his winter
quarters to the offices of civil government; and affected to assume, with more pleasure, the
character of a magistrate than that of a general. Before he took the field, he devolved on the
provincial governors most of the public and private causes which had been referred to his
tribunal; but, on his return, he carefully revised their proceedings, mitigated the rigor of the law,
and pronounced a second judgment on the judges themselves. Superior to the last temptation of
virtuous minds, an indiscreet and intemperate zeal for justice, he restrained, with calmness and
dignity, the warmth of an advocate, who prosecuted, for extortion, the president of the
Narbonnese province. "Who will ever be found guilty," exclaimed the vehement Delphidius, "if
it be enough to deny?" "And who," replied Julian, "will ever be innocent, if it be sufficient to
affirm?" In the general administration of peace and war, the interest of the sovereign is
commonly the same as that of his people; but Constantius would have thought himself deeply
injured, if the virtues of Julian had defrauded him of any part of the tribute which he extorted
from an oppressed and exhausted country. The prince who was invested with the ensigns of
royalty, might sometimes presume to correct the rapacious insolence of his inferior agents, to
expose their corrupt arts, and to introduce an equal and easier mode of collection. But the
management of the finances was more safely intrusted to Florentius, prætorian præfect of Gaul,
an effeminate tyrant, incapable of pity or remorse: and the haughty minister complained of the
most decent and gentle opposition, while Julian himself was rather inclined to censure the
weakness of his own behavior. The Cæsar had rejected, with abhorrence, a mandate for the levy
of an extraordinary tax; a new superindiction, which the præfect had offered for his signature;
and the faithful picture of the public misery, by which he had been obliged to justify his refusal,
offended the court of Constantius. We may enjoy the pleasure of reading the sentiments of
Julian, as he expresses them with warmth and freedom in a letter to one of his most intimate
friends. After stating his own conduct, he proceeds in the following terms: "Was it possible for
the disciple of Plato and Aristotle to act otherwise than I have done? Could I abandon the
unhappy subjects intrusted to my care? Was I not called upon to defend them from the repeated
injuries of these unfeeling robbers? A tribune who deserts his post is punished with death, and
deprived of the honors of burial. With what justice could I pronounce hissentence, if, in the hour
of danger, I myself neglected a duty far more sacred and far more important? God has placed me
in this elevated post; his providence will guard and support me. Should I be condemned to
suffer, I shall derive comfort from the testimony of a pure and upright conscience. Would to
Heaven that I still possessed a counsellor like Sallust! If they think proper to send me a
successor, I shall submit without reluctance; and had much rather improve the short opportunity
of doing good, than enjoy a long and lasting impunity of evil." The precarious and dependent
situation of Julian displayed his virtues and concealed his defects. The young hero who
supported, in Gaul, the throne of Constantius, was not permitted to reform the vices of the
government; but he had courage to alleviate or to pity the distress of the people. Unless he had
been able to revive the martial spirit of the Romans, or to introduce the arts of industry and
refinement among their savage enemies, he could not entertain any rational hopes of securing
the public tranquillity, either by the peace or conquest of Germany. Yet the victories of Julian
suspended, for a short time, the inroads of the Barbarians, and delayed the ruin of the Western
Empire.
His salutary influence restored the cities of Gaul, which had been so long exposed to the evils of
civil discord, Barbarian war, and domestic tyranny; and the spirit of industry was revived with
the hopes of enjoyment. Agriculture, manufactures, and commerce, again flourished under the
protection of the laws; and the curi, or civil corporations, were again filled with useful and
respectable members: the youth were no longer apprehensive of marriage; and married persons
were no longer apprehensive of posterity: the public and private festivals were celebrated with
customary pomp; and the frequent and secure intercourse of the provinces displayed the image
of national prosperity. A mind like that of Julian must have felt the general happiness of which
he was the author; but he viewed, with particular satisfaction and complacency, the city of Paris;
the seat of his winter residence, and the object even of his partial affection. That splendid
capital, which now embraces an ample territory on either side of the Seine, was originally
confined to the small island in the midst of the river, from whence the inhabitants derived a
supply of pure and salubrious water. The river bathed the foot of the walls; and the town was
accessible only by two wooden bridges. A forest overspread the northern side of the Seine, but
on the south, the ground, which now bears the name of the University, was insensibly covered
with houses, and adorned with a palace and amphitheatre, baths, an aqueduct, and a field of
Mars for the exercise of the Roman troops. The severity of the climate was tempered by the
neighborhood of the ocean; and with some precautions, which experience had taught, the vine
and fig-tree were successfully cultivated. But in remarkable winters, the Seine was deeply
frozen; and the huge pieces of ice that floated down the stream, might be compared, by an
Asiatic, to the blocks of white marble which were extracted from the quarries of Phrygia. The
licentiousness and corruption of Antioch recalled to the memory of Julian the severe and simple
manners of his beloved Lutetia; where the amusements of the theatre were unknown or
despised. He indignantly contrasted the effeminate Syrians with the brave and honest simplicity
of the Gauls, and almost forgave the intemperance, which was the only stain of the Celtic
character. If Julian could now revisit the capital of France, he might converse with men of
science and genius, capable of understanding and of instructing a disciple of the Greeks; he
might excuse the lively and graceful follies of a nation, whose martial spirit has never been
enervated by the indulgence of luxury; and he must applaud the perfection of that inestimable
art, which softens and refines and embellishes the intercourse of social life.
Chapter XX: Conversion Of Constantine.
Part I.
The Motives, Progress, And Effects Of The Conversion Of Constantine. -- Legal Establishment
And Constitution Of The Christian Or Catholic Church.
The public establishment of Christianity may be considered as one of those important and
domestic revolutions which excite the most lively curiosity, and afford the most valuable
instruction. The victories and the civil policy of Constantine no longer influence the state of
Europe; but a considerable portion of the globe still retains the impression which it received
from the conversion of that monarch; and the ecclesiastical institutions of his reign are still
connected, by an indissoluble chain, with the opinions, the passions, and the interests of the
present generation.
In the consideration of a subject which may be examined with impartiality, but cannot be viewed
with indifference, a difficulty immediately arises of a very unexpected nature; that of
ascertaining the real and precise date of the conversion of Constantine. The eloquent Lactantius,
in the midst of his court, seems impatient to proclaim to the world the glorious example of the
sovereign of Gaul; who, in the first moments of his reign, acknowledged and adored the majesty
of the true and only God. The learned Eusebius has ascribed the faith of Constantine to the
miraculous sign which was displayed in the heavens whilst he meditated and prepared the Italian
expedition. The historian Zosimus maliciously asserts, that the emperor had imbrued his hands
in the blood of his eldest son, before he publicly renounced the gods of Rome and of his
ancestors. The perplexity produced by these discordant authorities is derived from the behavior
of Constantine himself. According to the strictness of ecclesiastical language, the first of the
Christian emperors was unworthy of that name, till the moment of his death; since it was only
during his last illness that he received, as a catechumen, the imposition of hands, and was
afterwards admitted, by the initiatory rites of baptism, into the number of the faithful. The
Christianity of Constantine must be allowed in a much more vague and qualified sense; and the
nicest accuracy is required in tracing the slow and almost imperceptible gradations by which the
monarch declared himself the protector, and at length the proselyte, of the church. It was an
arduous task to eradicate the habits and prejudices of his education, to acknowledge the divine
power of Christ, and to understand that the truth of his revelation was incompatible with the
worship of the gods. The obstacles which he had probably experienced in his own mind,
instructed him to proceed with caution in the momentous change of a national religion; and he
insensibly discovered his new opinions, as far as he could enforce them with safety and with
effect. During the whole course of his reign, the stream of Christianity flowed with a gentle,
though accelerated, motion: but its general direction was sometimes checked, and sometimes
diverted, by the accidental circumstances of the times, and by the prudence, or possibly by the
caprice, of the monarch. His ministers were permitted to signify the intentions of their master in
the various language which was best adapted to their respective principles; and he artfully
balanced the hopes and fears of his subjects, by publishing in the same year two edicts; the first
of which enjoined the solemn observance of Sunday, and the second directed the regular
consultation of the Aruspices. While this important revolution yet remained in suspense, the
Christians and the Pagans watched the conduct of their sovereign with the same anxiety, but
with very opposite sentiments. The former were prompted by every motive of zeal, as well as
vanity, to exaggerate the marks of his favor, and the evidences of his faith. The latter, till their
just apprehensions were changed into despair and resentment, attempted to conceal from the
world, and from themselves, that the gods of Rome could no longer reckon the emperor in the
number of their votaries. The same passions and prejudices have engaged the partial writers of
the times to connect the public profession of Christianity with the most glorious or the most
ignominious æra of the reign of Constantine.
Whatever symptoms of Christian piety might transpire in the discourses or actions of
Constantine, he persevered till he was near forty years of age in the practice of the established
religion; and the same conduct which in the court of Nicomedia might be imputed to his fear,
could be ascribed only to the inclination or policy of the sovereign of Gaul. His liberality
restored and enriched the temples of the gods; the medals which issued from his Imperial mint
are impressed with the figures and attributes of Jupiter and Apollo, of Mars and Hercules; and
his filial piety increased the council of Olympus by the solemn apotheosis of his father
Constantius. But the devotion of Constantine was more peculiarly directed to the genius of the
Sun, the Apollo of Greek and Roman mythology; and he was pleased to be represented with the
symbols of the God of Light and Poetry. The unerring shafts of that deity, the brightness of his
eyes, his laurel wreath, immortal beauty, and elegant accomplishments, seem to point him out as
the patron of a young hero. The altars of Apollo were crowned with the votive offerings of
Constantine; and the credulous multitude were taught to believe, that the emperor was permitted
to behold with mortal eyes the visible majesty of their tutelar deity; and that, either walking or in
a vision, he was blessed with the auspicious omens of a long and victorious reign. The Sun was
universally celebrated as the invincible guide and protector of Constantine; and the Pagans
might reasonably expect that the insulted god would pursue with unrelenting vengeance the
impiety of his ungrateful favorite.
As long as Constantine exercised a limited sovereignty over the provinces of Gaul, his Christian
subjects were protected by the authority, and perhaps by the laws, of a prince, who wisely left to
the gods the care of vindicating their own honor. If we may credit the assertion of Constantine
himself, he had been an indignant spectator of the savage cruelties which were inflicted, by the
hands of Roman soldiers, on those citizens whose religion was their only crime. In the East and
in the West, he had seen the different effects of severity and indulgence; and as the former was
rendered still more odious by the example of Galerius, his implacable enemy, the latter was
recommended to his imitation by the authority and advice of a dying father. The son of
Constantius immediately suspended or repealed the edicts of persecution, and granted the free
exercise of their religious ceremonies to all those who had already professed themselves
members of the church. They were soon encouraged to depend on the favor as well as on the
justice of their sovereign, who had imbibed a secret and sincere reverence for the name of
Christ, and for the God of the Christians.
About five months after the conquest of Italy, the emperor made a solemn and authentic
declaration of his sentiments by the celebrated edict of Milan, which restored peace to the
Catholic church. In the personal interview of the two western princes, Constantine, by the
ascendant of genius and power, obtained the ready concurrence of his colleague, Licinius; the
union of their names and authority disarmed the fury of Maximin; and after the death of the
tyrant of the East, the edict of Milan was received as a general and fundamental law of the
Roman world.
The wisdom of the emperors provided for the restitution of all the civil and religious rights of
which the Christians had been so unjustly deprived. It was enacted that the places of worship,
and public lands, which had been confiscated, should be restored to the church, without dispute,
without delay, and without expense; and this severe injunction was accompanied with a gracious
promise, that if any of the purchasers had paid a fair and adequate price, they should be
indemnified from the Imperial treasury. The salutary regulations which guard the future
tranquillity of the faithful are framed on the principles of enlarged and equal toleration; and such
an equality must have been interpreted by a recent sect as an advantageous and honorable
distinction. The two emperors proclaim to the world, that they have granted a free and absolute
power to the Christians, and to all others, of following the religion which each individual thinks
proper to prefer, to which he has addicted his mind, and which he may deem the best adapted to
his own use. They carefully explain every ambiguous word, remove every exception, and exact
from the governors of the provinces a strict obedience to the true and simple meaning of an
edict, which was designed to establish and secure, without any limitation, the claims of religious
liberty. They condescend to assign two weighty reasons which have induced them to allow this
universal toleration: the humane intention of consulting the peace and happiness of their people;
and the pious hope, that, by such a conduct, they shall appease and propitiate the Deity, whose
seat is in heaven. They gratefully acknowledge the many signal proofs which they have received
of the divine favor; and they trust that the same Providence will forever continue to protect the
prosperity of the prince and people. From these vague and indefinite expressions of piety, three
suppositions may be deduced, of a different, but not of an incompatible nature. The mind of
Constantine might fluctuate between the Pagan and the Christian religions. According to the
loose and complying notions of Polytheism, he might acknowledge the God of the Christians as
one of the many deities who compose the hierarchy of heaven. Or perhaps he might embrace the
philosophic and pleasing idea, that, notwithstanding the variety of names, of rites, and of
opinions, all the sects, and all the nations of mankind, are united in the worship of the common
Father and Creator of the universe.
But the counsels of princes are more frequently influenced by views of temporal advantage, than
by considerations of abstract and speculative truth. The partial and increasing favor of
Constantine may naturally be referred to the esteem which he entertained for the moral character
of the Christians; and to a persuasion, that the propagation of the gospel would inculcate the
practice of private and public virtue. Whatever latitude an absolute monarch may assume in his
own conduct, whatever indulgence he may claim for his own passions, it is undoubtedly his
interest that all his subjects should respect the natural and civil obligations of society. But the
operation of the wisest laws is imperfect and precarious. They seldom inspire virtue, they cannot
always restrain vice. Their power is insufficient to prohibit all that they condemn, nor can they
always punish the actions which they prohibit. The legislators of antiquity had summoned to
their aid the powers of education and of opinion. But every principle which had once maintained
the vigor and purity of Rome and Sparta, was long since extinguished in a declining and despotic
empire. Philosophy still exercised her temperate sway over the human mind, but the cause of
virtue derived very feeble support from the influence of the Pagan superstition. Under these
discouraging circumstances, a prudent magistrate might observe with pleasure the progress of a
religion which diffused among the people a pure, benevolent, and universal system of ethics,
adapted to every duty and every condition of life; recommended as the will and reason of the
supreme Deity, and enforced by the sanction of eternal rewards or punishments. The experience
of Greek and Roman history could not inform the world how far the system of national manners
might be reformed and improved by the precepts of a divine revelation; and Constantine might
listen with some confidence to the flattering, and indeed reasonable, assurances of Lactantius.
The eloquent apologist seemed firmly to expect, and almost ventured to promise, that the
establishment of Christianity would restore the innocence and felicity of the primitive age;
thatthe worship of the true God would extinguish war and dissension among those who mutually
considered themselves as the children of a common parent; that every impure desire, every
angry or selfish passion, would be restrained by the knowledge of the gospel; and that the
magistrates might sheath the sword of justice among a people who would be universally actuated
by the sentiments of truth and piety, of equity and moderation, of harmony and universal love.
The passive and unresisting obedience, which bows under the yoke of authority, or even of
oppression, must have appeared, in the eyes of an absolute monarch, the most conspicuous and
useful of the evangelic virtues. The primitive Christians derived the institution of civil
government, not from the consent of the people, but from the decrees of Heaven. The reigning
emperor, though he had usurped the sceptre by treason and murder, immediately assumed the
sacred character of vicegerent of the Deity. To the Deity alone he was accountable for the abuse
of his power; and his subjects were indissolubly bound, by their oath of fidelity, to a tyrant, who
had violated every law of nature and society. The humble Christians were sent into the world as
sheep among wolves; and since they were not permitted to employ force even in the defence of
their religion, they should be still more criminal if they were tempted to shed the blood of their
fellow-creatures in disputing the vain privileges, or the sordid possessions, of this transitory life.
Faithful to the doctrine of the apostle, who in the reign of Nero had preached the duty of
unconditional submission, the Christians of the three first centuries preserved their conscience
pure and innocent of the guilt of secret conspiracy, or open rebellion. While they experienced
the rigor of persecution, they were never provoked either to meet their tyrants in the field, or
indignantly to withdraw themselves into some remote and sequestered corner of the globe. The
Protestants of France, of Germany, and of Britain, who asserted with such intrepid courage their
civil and religious freedom, have been insulted by the invidious comparison between the conduct
of the primitive and of the reformed Christians. Perhaps, instead of censure, some applause may
be due to the superior sense and spirit of our ancestors, who had convinced themselves that
religion cannot abolish the unalienable rights of human nature. Perhaps the patience of the
primitive church may be ascribed to its weakness, as well as to its virtue. A sect of unwarlike
plebeians, without leaders, without arms, without fortifications, must have encountered
inevitable destruction in a rash and fruitless resistance to the master of the Roman legions. But
the Christians, when they deprecated the wrath of Diocletian, or solicited the favor of
Constantine, could allege, with truth and confidence, that they held the principle of passive
obedience, and that, in the space of three centuries, their conduct had always been conformable
to their principles. They might add, that the throne of the emperors would be established on a
fixed and permanent basis, if all their subjects, embracing the Christian doctrine, should learn to
suffer and to obey.
In the general order of Providence, princes and tyrants are considered as the ministers of Heaven,
appointed to rule or to chastise the nations of the earth. But sacred history affords many
illustrious examples of the more immediate interposition of the Deity in the government of his
chosen people. The sceptre and the sword were committed to the hands of Moses, of Joshua, of
Gideon, of David, of the Maccabees; the virtues of those heroes were the motive or the effect of
the divine favor, the success of their arms was destined to achieve the deliverance or the triumph
of the church. If the judges of Isræl were occasional and temporary magistrates, the kings of
Judah derived from the royal unction of their great ancestor an hereditary and indefeasible right,
which could not be forfeited by their own vices, nor recalled by the caprice of their subjects. The
same extraordinary providence, which was no longer confined to the Jewish people, might elect
Constantine and his family as the protectors of the Christian world; and the devout Lactantius
announces, in a prophetic tone, the future glories of his long and universal reign. Galerius and
Maximin, Maxentius and Licinius, were the rivals who shared with the favorite of heaven the
provinces of the empire. The tragic deaths of Galerius and Maximin soon gratified the
resentment, and fulfilled the sanguine expectations, of the Christians. The success of
Constantine against Maxentius and Licinius removed the two formidable competitors who still
opposed the triumph of the second David, and his cause might seem to claim the peculiar
interposition of Providence. The character of the Roman tyrant disgraced the purple and human
nature; and though the Christians might enjoy his precarious favor, they were exposed, with the
rest of his subjects, to the effects of his wanton and capricious cruelty. The conduct of Licinius
soon betrayed the reluctance with which he had consented to the wise and humane regulations of
the edict of Milan. The convocation of provincial synods was prohibited in his dominions; his
Christian officers were ignominiously dismissed; and if he avoided the guilt, or rather danger, of
a general persecution, his partial oppressions were rendered still more odious by the violation of
a solemn and voluntary engagement. While the East, according to the lively expression of
Eusebius, was involved in the shades of infernal darkness, the auspicious rays of celestial light
warmed and illuminated the provinces of the West. The piety of Constantine was admitted as an
unexceptionable proof of the justice of his arms; and his use of victory confirmed the opinion of
the Christians, that their hero was inspired, and conducted, by the Lord of Hosts. The conquest
of Italy produced a general edict of toleration; and as soon as the defeat of Licinius had invested
Constantine with the sole dominion of the Roman world, he immediately, by circular letters,
exhorted all his subjects to imitate, without delay, the example of their sovereign, and to
embrace the divine truth of Christianity.
Chapter XX: Conversion Of Constantine. -- Part II.
The assurance that the elevation of Constantine was intimately connected with the designs of
Providence, instilled into the minds of the Christians two opinions, which, by very different
means, assisted the accomplishment of the prophecy. Their warm and active loyalty exhausted in
his favor every resource of human industry; and they confidently expected that their strenuous
efforts would be seconded by some divine and miraculous aid. The enemies of Constantine have
imputed to interested motives the alliance which he insensibly contracted with the Catholic
church, and which apparently contributed to the success of his ambition. In the beginning of the
fourth century, the Christians still bore a very inadequate proportion to the inhabitants of the
empire; but among a degenerate people, who viewed the change of masters with the indifference
of slaves, the spirit and union of a religious party might assist the popular leader, to whose
service, from a principle of conscience, they had devoted their lives and fortunes. The example
of his father had instructed Constantine to esteem and to reward the merit of the Christians; and
in the distribution of public offices, he had the advantage of strengthening his government, by
the choice of ministers or generals, in whose fidelity he could repose a just and unreserved
confidence. By the influence of these dignified missionaries, the proselytes of the new faith must
have multiplied in the court and army; the Barbarians of Germany, who filled the ranks of the
legions, were of a careless temper, which acquiesced without resistance in the religion of their
commander; and when they passed the Alps, it may fairly be presumed, that a great number of
the soldiers had already consecrated their swords to the service of Christ and of Constantine.
The habits of mankind and the interests of religion gradually abated the horror of war and
bloodshed, which had so long prevailed among the Christians; and in the councils which were
assembled under the gracious protection of Constantine, the authority of the bishops was
seasonably employed to ratify the obligation of the military oath, and to inflict the penalty of
excommunication on those soldiers who threw away their arms during the peace of the church.
While Constantine, in his own dominions, increased the number and zeal of his faithful
adherents, he could depend on the support of a powerful faction in those provinces which were
still possessed or usurped by his rivals. A secret disaffection was diffused among the Christian
subjects of Maxentius and Licinius; and the resentment, which the latter did not attempt to
conceal, served only to engage them still more deeply in the interest of his competitor. The
regular correspondence which connected the bishops of the most distant provinces, enabled them
freely to communicate their wishes and their designs, and to transmit without danger any useful
intelligence, or any pious contributions, which might promote the service of Constantine, who
publicly declared that he had taken up arms for the deliverance of the church.
The enthusiasm which inspired the troops, and perhaps the emperor himself, had sharpened their
swords while it satisfied their conscience. They marched to battle with the full assurance, that
the same God, who had formerly opened a passage to the Isrælites through the waters of Jordan,
and had thrown down the walls of Jericho at the sound of the trumpets of Joshua, would display
his visible majesty and power in the victory of Constantine. The evidence of ecclesiastical
history is prepared to affirm, that their expectations were justified by the conspicuous miracle to
which the conversion of the first Christian emperor has been almost unanimously ascribed. The
real or imaginary cause of so important an event, deserves and demands the attention of
posterity; and I shall endeavor to form a just estimate of the famous vision of Constantine, by a
distinct consideration of the standard, the dream, and the celestial sign; by separating the
historical, the natural, and the marvellous parts of this extraordinary story, which, in the
composition of a specious argument, have been artfully confounded in one splendid and brittle
mass.
I. An instrument of the tortures which were inflicted only on slaves and strangers, became on
object of horror in the eyes of a Roman citizen; and the ideas of guilt, of pain, and of ignominy,
were closely united with the idea of the cross. The piety, rather than the humanity, of
Constantine soon abolished in his dominions the punishment which the Savior of mankind had
condescended to suffer; but the emperor had already learned to despise the prejudices of his
education, and of his people, before he could erect in the midst of Rome his own statue, bearing
a cross in its right hand; with an inscription which referred the victory of his arms, and the
deliverance of Rome, to the virtue of that salutary sign, the true symbol of force and courage.
The same symbol sanctified the arms of the soldiers of Constantine; the cross glittered on their
helmet, was engraved on their shields, was interwoven into their banners; and the consecrated
emblems which adorned the person of the emperor himself, were distinguished only by richer
materials and more exquisite workmanship. But the principal standard which displayed the
triumph of the cross was styled the Labarum, an obscure, though celebrated name, which has
been vainly derived from almost all the languages of the world. It is described as a long pike
intersected by a transversal beam. The silken veil, which hung down from the beam, was
curiously inwrought with the images of the reigning monarch and his children. The summit of
the pike supported a crown of gold which enclosed the mysterious monogram, at once
expressive of the figure of the cross, and the initial letters, of the name of Christ. The safety of
the labarum was intrusted to fifty guards, of approved valor and fidelity; their station was
marked by honors and emoluments; and some fortunate accidents soon introduced an opinion,
that as long as the guards of the labarum were engaged in the execution of their office, they were
secure and invulnerable amidst the darts of the enemy. In the second civil war, Licinius felt and
dreaded the power of this consecrated banner, the sight of which, in the distress of battle,
animated the soldiers of Constantine with an invincible enthusiasm, and scattered terror and
dismay through the ranks of the adverse legions. The Christian emperors, who respected the
example of Constantine, displayed in all their military expeditions the standard of the cross; but
when the degenerate successors of Theodosius had ceased to appear in person at the head of
their armies, the labarum was deposited as a venerable but useless relic in the palace of
Constantinople. Its honors are still preserved on the medals of the Flavian family. Their grateful
devotion has placed the monogram of Christ in the midst of the ensigns of Rome. The solemn
epithets of, safety of the republic, glory of the army, restoration of public happiness, are equally
applied to the religious and military trophies; and there is still extant a medal of the emperor
Constantius, where the standard of the labarum is accompanied with these memorable words, By
This Sign Thou Shalt Conquer.
II. In all occasions of danger and distress, it was the practice of the primitive Christians to fortify
their minds and bodies by the sign of the cross, which they used, in all their ecclesiastical rites,
in all the daily occurrences of life, as an infallible preservative against every species of spiritual
or temporal evil. The authority of the church might alone have had sufficient weight to justify
the devotion of Constantine, who in the same prudent and gradual progress acknowledged the
truth, and assumed the symbol, of Christianity. But the testimony of a contemporary writer, who
in a formal treatise has avenged the cause of religion, bestows on the piety of the emperor a
more awful and sublime character. He affirms, with the most perfect confidence, that in the
night which preceded the last battle against Maxentius, Constantine was admonished in a dream
* to inscribe the shields of his soldiers with the celestial sign of God, the sacred monogram of
the name of Christ; that he executed the commands of Heaven, and that his valor and obedience
were rewarded by the decisive victory of the Milvian Bridge. Some considerations might perhaps
incline a sceptical mind to suspect the judgment or the veracity of the rhetorician, whose pen,
either from zeal or interest, was devoted to the cause of the prevailing faction. He appears to
have published his deaths of the persecutors at Nicomedia about three years after the Roman
victory; but the interval of a thousand miles, and a thousand days, will allow an ample latitude
for the invention of declaimers, the credulity of party, and the tacit approbation of the emperor
himself who might listen without indignation to a marvellous tale, which exalted his fame, and
promoted his designs. In favor of Licinius, who still dissembled his animosity to the Christians,
the same author has provided a similar vision, of a form of prayer, which was communicated by
an angel, and repeated by the whole army before they engaged the legions of the tyrant Maximin.
The frequent repetition of miracles serves to provoke, where it does not subdue, the reason of
mankind; but if the dream of Constantine is separately considered, it may be naturally explained
either by the policy or the enthusiasm of the emperor. Whilst his anxiety for the approaching
day, which must decide the fate of the empire, was suspended by a short and interrupted
slumber, the venerable form of Christ, and the well-known symbol of his religion, might forcibly
offer themselves to the active fancy of a prince who reverenced the name, and had perhaps
secretly implored the power, of the God of the Christians. As readily might a consummate
statesman indulge himself in the use of one of those military stratagems, one of those pious
frauds, which Philip and Sertorius had employed with such art and effect. The præternatural
origin of dreams was universally admitted by the nations of antiquity, and a considerable part of
the Gallic army was already prepared to place their confidence in the salutary sign of the
Christian religion. The secret vision of Constantine could be disproved only by the event; and
the intrepid hero who had passed the Alps and the Apennine, might view with careless despair
the consequences of a defeat under the walls of Rome. The senate and people, exulting in their
own deliverance from an odious tyrant, acknowledged that the victory of Constantine surpassed
the powers of man, without daring to insinuate that it had been obtained by the protection of the
Gods. The triumphal arch, which was erected about three years after the event, proclaims, in
ambiguous language, that by the greatness of his own mind, and by an instinct or impulse of the
Divinity, he had saved and avenged the Roman republic. The Pagan orator, who had seized an
earlier opportunity of celebrating the virtues of the conqueror, supposes that he alone enjoyed a
secret and intimate commerce with the Supreme Being, who delegated the care of mortals to his
subordinate deities; and thus assigns a very plausible reason why the subjects of Constantine
should not presume to embrace the new religion of their sovereign.
III. The philosopher, who with calm suspicion examines the dreams and omens, the miracles and
prodigies, of profane or even of ecclesiastical history, will probably conclude, that if the eyes of
the spectators have sometimes been deceived by fraud, the understanding of the readers has
much more frequently been insulted by fiction. Every event, or appearance, or accident, which
seems to deviate from the ordinary course of nature, has been rashly ascribed to the immediate
action of the Deity; and the astonished fancy of the multitude has sometimes given shape and
color, language and motion, to the fleeting but uncommon meteors of the air. Nazarius and
Eusebius are the two most celebrated orators, who, in studied panegyrics, have labored to exalt
the glory of Constantine. Nine years after the Roman victory, Nazarius describes an army of
divine warriors, who seemed to fall from the sky: he marks their beauty, their spirit, their
gigantic forms, the stream of light which beamed from their celestial armor, their patience in
suffering themselves to be heard, as well as seen, by mortals; and their declaration that they were
sent, that they flew, to the assistance of the great Constantine. For the truth of this prodigy, the
Pagan orator appeals to the whole Gallic nation, in whose presence he was then speaking; and
seems to hope that the ancient apparitions would now obtain credit from this recent and public
event. The Christian fable of Eusebius, which, in the space of twenty-six years, might arise from
the original dream, is cast in a much more correct and elegant mould. In one of the marches of
Constantine, he is reported to have seen with his own eyes the luminous trophy of the cross,
placed above the meridian sun and inscribed with the following words: By This Conquer. This
amazing object in the sky astonished the whole army, as well as the emperor himself, who was
yet undetermined in the choice of a religion: but his astonishment was converted into faith by the
vision of the ensuing night. Christ appeared before his eyes; and displaying the same celestial
sign of the cross, he directed Constantine to frame a similar standard, and to march, with an
assurance of victory, against Maxentius and all his enemies. The learned bishop of Cæsarea
appears to be sensible, that the recent discovery of this marvellous anecdote would excite some
surprise and distrust among the most pious of his readers. Yet, instead of ascertaining the precise
circumstances of time and place, which always serve to detect falsehood or establish truth;
instead of collecting and recording the evidence of so many living witnesses who must have
been spectators of this stupendous miracle; Eusebius contents himself with alleging a very
singular testimony; that of the deceased Constantine, who, many years after the event, in the
freedom of conversation, had related to him this extraordinary incident of his own life, and had
attested the truth of it by a solemn oath. The prudence and gratitude of the learned prelate
forbade him to suspect the veracity of his victorious master; but he plainly intimates, that in a
fact of such a nature, he should have refused his assent to any meaner authority. This motive of
credibility could not survive the power of the Flavian family; and the celestial sign, which the
Infidels might afterwards deride, was disregarded by the Christians of the age which
immediately followed the conversion of Constantine. But the Catholic church, both of the East
and of the West, has adopted a prodigy which favors, or seems to favor, the popular worship of
the cross. The vision of Constantine maintained an honorable place in the legend of superstition,
till the bold and sagacious spirit of criticism presumed to depreciate the triumph, and to arraign
the truth, of the first Christian emperor.
The Protestant and philosophic readers of the present age will incline to believe, that in the
account of his own conversion, Constantine attested a wilful falsehood by a solemn and
deliberate perjury. They may not hesitate to pronounce, that in the choice of a religion, his mind
was determined only by a sense of interest; and that (according to the expression of a profane
poet ) he used the altars of the church as a convenient footstool to the throne of the empire. A
conclusion so harsh and so absolute is not, however, warranted by our knowledge of human
nature, of Constantine, or of Christianity. In an age of religious fervor, the most artful statesmen
are observed to feel some part of the enthusiasm which they inspire, and the most orthodox
saints assume the dangerous privilege of defending the cause of truth by the arms of deceit and
falsehood. Personal interest is often the standard of our belief, as well as of our practice; and the
same motives of temporal advantage which might influence the public conduct and professions
of Constantine, would insensibly dispose his mind to embrace a religion so propitious to his
fame and fortunes. His vanity was gratified by the flattering assurance, that he had been chosen
by Heaven to reign over the earth; success had justified his divine title to the throne, and that
title was founded on the truth of the Christian revelation. As real virtue is sometimes excited by
undeserved applause, the specious piety of Constantine, if at first it was only specious, might
gradually, by the influence of praise, of habit, and of example, be matured into serious faith and
fervent devotion. The bishops and teachers of the new sect, whose dress and manners had not
qualified them for the residence of a court, were admitted to the Imperial table; they
accompanied the monarch in his expeditions; and the ascendant which one of them, an Egyptian
or a Spaniard, acquired over his mind, was imputed by the Pagans to the effect of magic.
Lactantius, who has adorned the precepts of the gospel with the eloquence of Cicero, and
Eusebius, who has consecrated the learning and philosophy of the Greeks to the service of
religion, were both received into the friendship and familiarity of their sovereign; and those able
masters of controversy could patiently watch the soft and yielding moments of persuasion, and
dexterously apply the arguments which were the best adapted to his character and understanding.
Whatever advantages might be derived from the acquisition of an Imperial proselyte, he was
distinguished by the splendor of his purple, rather than by the superiority of wisdom, or virtue,
from the many thousands of his subjects who had embraced the doctrines of Christianity. Nor
can it be deemed incredible, that the mind of an unlettered soldier should have yielded to the
weight of evidence, which, in a more enlightened age, has satisfied or subdued the reason of a
Grotius, a Pascal, or a Locke. In the midst of the incessant labors of his great office, this soldier
employed, or affected to employ, the hours of the night in the diligent study of the Scriptures,
and the composition of theological discourses; which he afterwards pronounced in the presence
of a numerous and applauding audience. In a very long discourse, which is still extant, the royal
preacher expatiates on the various proofs still extant, the royal preacher expatiates on the various
proofs of religion; but he dwells with peculiar complacency on the Sibylline verses, and the
fourth eclogue of Virgil. Forty years before the birth of Christ, the Mantuan bard, as if inspired
by the celestial muse of Isaiah, had celebrated, with all the pomp of oriental metaphor, the return
of the Virgin, the fall of the serpent, the approaching birth of a godlike child, the offspring of the
great Jupiter, who should expiate the guilt of human kind, and govern the peaceful universe with
the virtues of his father; the rise and appearance of a heavenly race, primitive nation throughout
the world; and the gradual restoration of the innocence and felicity of the golden age. The poet
was perhaps unconscious of the secret sense and object of these sublime predictions, which have
been so unworthily applied to the infant son of a consul, or a triumvir; but if a more splendid,
and indeed specious interpretation of the fourth eclogue contributed to the conversion of the first
Christian emperor, Virgil may deserve to be ranked among the most successful missionaries of
the gospel.
Chapter XX: Conversion Of Constantine. -- Part III.
The awful mysteries of the Christian faith and worship were concealed from the eyes of
strangers, and even of catechumens, with an affected secrecy, which served to excite their
wonder and curiosity. But the severe rules of discipline which the prudence of the bishops had
instituted, were relaxed by the same prudence in favor of an Imperial proselyte, whom it was so
important to allure, by every gentle condescension, into the pale of the church; and Constantine
was permitted, at least by a tacit dispensation, to enjoy most of the privileges, before he had
contracted any of the obligations, of a Christian. Instead of retiring from the congregation, when
the voice of the deacon dismissed the profane multitude, he prayed with the faithful, disputed
with the bishops, preached on the most sublime and intricate subjects of theology, celebrated
with sacred rites the vigil of Easter, and publicly declared himself, not only a partaker, but, in
some measure, a priest and hierophant of the Christian mysteries. The pride of Constantine
might assume, and his services had deserved, some extraordinary distinction: and ill-timed rigor
might have blasted the unripened fruits of his conversion; and if the doors of the church had
been strictly closed against a prince who had deserted the altars of the gods, the master of the
empire would have been left destitute of any form of religious worship. In his last visit to Rome,
he piously disclaimed and insulted the superstition of his ancestors, by refusing to lead the
military procession of the equestrian order, and to offer the public vows to the Jupiter of the
Capitoline Hill. Many years before his baptism and death, Constantine had proclaimed to the
world, that neither his person nor his image should ever more be seen within the walls of an
idolatrous temple; while he distributed through the provinces a variety of medals and pictures,
which represented the emperor in an humble and suppliant posture of Christian devotion.
The pride of Constantine, who refused the privileges of a catechumen, cannot easily be
explained or excused; but the delay of his baptism may be justified by the maxims and the
practice of ecclesiastical antiquity. The sacrament of baptism was regularly administered by the
bishop himself, with his assistant clergy, in the cathedral church of the diocese, during the fifty
days between the solemn festivals of Easter and Pentecost; and this holy term admitted a
numerous band of infants and adult persons into the bosom of the church. The discretion of
parents often suspended the baptism of their children till they could understand the obligations
which they contracted: the severity of ancient bishops exacted from the new converts a novitiate
of two or three years; and the catechumens themselves, from different motives of a temporal or a
spiritual nature, were seldom impatient to assume the character of perfect and initiated
Christians. The sacrament of baptism was supposed to contain a full and absolute expiation of
sin; and the soul was instantly restored to its original purity, and entitled to the promise of
eternal salvation. Among the proselytes of Christianity, there are many who judged it imprudent
to precipitate a salutary rite, which could not be repeated; to throw away an inestimable
privilege, which could never be recovered. By the delay of their baptism, they could venture
freely to indulge their passions in the enjoyments of this world, while they still retained in their
own hands the means of a sure and easy absolution. The sublime theory of the gospel had made
a much fainter impression on the heart than on the understanding of Constantine himself. He
pursued the great object of his ambition through the dark and bloody paths of war and policy;
and, after the victory, he abandoned himself, without moderation, to the abuse of his fortune.
Instead of asserting his just superiority above the imperfect heroism and profane philosophy of
Trajan and the Antonines, the mature age of Constantine forfeited the reputation which he had
acquired in his youth. As he gradually advanced in the knowledge of truth, he proportionally
declined in the practice of virtue; and the same year of his reign in which he convened the
council of Nice, was polluted by the execution, or rather murder, of his eldest son. This date is
alone sufficient to refute the ignorant and malicious suggestions of Zosimus, who affirms, that,
after the death of Crispus, the remorse of his father accepted from the ministers of Christianity
the expiation which he had vainly solicited from the Pagan pontiffs. At the time of the death of
Crispus, the emperor could no longer hesitate in the choice of a religion; he could no longer be
ignorant that the church was possessed of an infallible remedy, though he chose to defer the
application of it till the approach of death had removed the temptation and danger of a relapse.
The bishops whom he summoned, in his last illness, to the palace of Nicomedia, were edified by
the fervor with which he requested and received the sacrament of baptism, by the solemn
protestation that the remainder of his life should be worthy of a disciple of Christ, and by his
humble refusal to wear the Imperial purple after he had been clothed in the white garment of a
Neophyte. The example and reputation of Constantine seemed to countenance the delay of
baptism. Future tyrants were encouraged to believe, that the innocent blood which they might
shed in a long reign would instantly be washed away in the waters of regeneration; and the abuse
of religion dangerously undermined the foundations of moral virtue.
The gratitude of the church has exalted the virtues and excused the failings of a generous patron,
who seated Christianity on the throne of the Roman world; and the Greeks, who celebrate the
festival of the Imperial saint, seldom mention the name of Constantine without adding the title
of equal to the Apostles. Such a comparison, if it allude to the character of those divine
missionaries, must be imputed to the extravagance of impious flattery. But if the parallel be
confined to the extent and number of their evangelic victories the success of Constantine might
perhaps equal that of the Apostles themselves. By the edicts of toleration, he removed the
temporal disadvantages which had hitherto retarded the progress of Christianity; and its active
and numerous ministers received a free permission, a liberal encouragement, to recommend the
salutary truths of revelation by every argument which could affect the reason or piety of
mankind. The exact balance of the two religions continued but a moment; and the piercing eye
of ambition and avarice soon discovered, that the profession of Christianity might contribute to
the interest of the present, as well as of a future life. The hopes of wealth and honors, the
example of an emperor, his exhortations, his irresistible smiles, diffused conviction among the
venal and obsequious crowds which usually fill the apartments of a palace. The cities which
signalized a forward zeal by the voluntary destruction of their temples, were distinguished by
municipal privileges, and rewarded with popular donatives; and the new capital of the East
gloried in the singular advantage that Constantinople was never profaned by the worship of
idols. As the lower ranks of society are governed by imitation, the conversion of those who
possessed any eminence of birth, of power, or of riches, was soon followed by dependent
multitudes. The salvation of the common people was purchased at an easy rate, if it be true that,
in one year, twelve thousand men were baptized at Rome, besides a proportionable number of
women and children, and that a white garment, with twenty pieces of gold, had been promised
by the emperor to every convert. The powerful influence of Constantine was not circumscribed
by the narrow limits of his life, or of his dominions. The education which he bestowed on his
sons and nephews secured to the empire a race of princes, whose faith was still more lively and
sincere, as they imbibed, in their earliest infancy, the spirit, or at least the doctrine, of
Christianity. War and commerce had spread the knowledge of the gospel beyond the confines of
the Roman provinces; and the Barbarians, who had disdained as humble and proscribed sect,
soon learned to esteem a religion which had been so lately embraced by the greatest monarch,
and the most civilized nation, of the globe. The Goths and Germans, who enlisted under the
standard of Rome, revered the cross which glittered at the head of the legions, and their fierce
countrymen received at the same time the lessons of faith and of humanity. The kings of Iberia
and Armenia * worshipped the god of their protector; and their subjects, who have invariably
preserved the name of Christians, soon formed a sacred and perpetual connection with their
Roman brethren. The Christians of Persia were suspected, in time of war, of preferring their
religion to their country; but as long as peace subsisted between the two empires, the persecuting
spirit of the Magi was effectually restrained by the interposition of Constantine. The rays of the
gospel illuminated the coast of India. The colonies of Jews, who had penetrated into Arabia and
Ethiopia, opposed the progress of Christianity; but the labor of the missionaries was in some
measure facilitated by a previous knowledge of the Mosaic revelation; and Abyssinia still
reveres the memory of Frumentius, * who, in the time of Constantine, devoted his life to the
conversion of those sequestered regions. Under the reign of his son Constantius, Theophilus,
who was himself of Indian extraction, was invested with the double character of ambassador and
bishop. He embarked on the Red Sea with two hundred horses of the purest breed of
Cappadocia, which were sent by the emperor to the prince of the Sabæans, or Homerites.
Theophilus was intrusted with many other useful or curious presents, which might raise the
admiration, and conciliate the friendship, of the Barbarians; and he successfully employed
several years in a pastoral visit to the churches of the torrid zone.
The irresistible power of the Roman emperors was displayed in the important and dangerous
change of the national religion. The terrors of a military force silenced the faint and unsupported
murmurs of the Pagans, and there was reason to expect, that the cheerful submission of the
Christian clergy, as well as people, would be the result of conscience and gratitude. It was long
since established, as a fundamental maxim of the Roman constitution, that every rank of citizens
was alike subject to the laws, and that the care of religion was the right as well as duty of the
civil magistrate. Constantine and his successors could not easily persuade themselves that they
had forfeited, by their conversion, any branch of the Imperial prerogatives, or that they were
incapable of giving laws to a religion which they had protected and embraced. The emperors still
continued to exercise a supreme jurisdiction over the ecclesiastical order, and the sixteenth book
of the Theodosian code represents, under a variety of titles, the authority which they assumed in
the government of the Catholic church.
But the distinction of the spiritual and temporal powers, which had never been imposed on the
free spirit of Greece and Rome, was introduced and confirmed by the legal establishment of
Christianity. The office of supreme pontiff, which, from the time of Numa to that of Augustus,
had always been exercised by one of the most eminent of the senators, was at length united to
the Imperial dignity. The first magistrate of the state, as often as he was prompted by
superstition or policy, performed with his own hands the sacerdotal functions; nor was there any
order of priests, either at Rome or in the provinces, who claimed a more sacred character among
men, or a more intimate communication with the gods. But in the Christian church, which
intrusts the service of the altar to a perpetual succession of consecrated ministers, the monarch,
whose spiritual rank is less honorable than that of the meanest deacon, was seated below the
rails of the sanctuary, and confounded with the rest of the faithful multitude. The emperor might
be saluted as the father of his people, but he owed a filial duty and reverence to the fathers of the
church; and the same marks of respect, which Constantine had paid to the persons of saints and
confessors, were soon exacted by the pride of the episcopal order. A secret conflict between the
civil and ecclesiastical jurisdictions embarrassed the operation of the Roman government; and a
pious emperor was alarmed by the guilt and danger of touching with a profane hand the ark of
the covenant. The separation of men into the two orders of the clergy and of the laity was,
indeed, familiar to many nations of antiquity; and the priests of India, of Persia, of Assyria, of
Judea, of Æthiopia, of Egypt, and of Gaul, derived from a celestial origin the temporal power
and possessions which they had acquired. These venerable institutions had gradually assimilated
themselves to the manners and government of their respective countries; but the opposition or
contempt of the civil power served to cement the discipline of the primitive church. The
Christians had been obliged to elect their own magistrates, to raise and distribute a peculiar
revenue, and to regulate the internal policy of their republic by a code of laws, which were
ratified by the consent of the people and the practice of three hundred years. When Constantine
embraced the faith of the Christians, he seemed to contract a perpetual alliance with a distinct
and independent society; and the privileges granted or confirmed by that emperor, or by his
successors, were accepted, not as the precarious favors of the court, but as the just and
inalienable rights of the ecclesiastical order.
The Catholic church was administered by the spiritual and legal jurisdiction of eighteen hundred
bishops; of whom one thousand were seated in the Greek, and eight hundred in the Latin,
provinces of the empire. The extent and boundaries of their respective dioceses had been
variously and accidentally decided by the zeal and success of the first missionaries, by the
wishes of the people, and by the propagation of the gospel. Episcopal churches were closely
planted along the banks of the Nile, on the sea-coast of Africa, in the proconsular Asia, and
through the southern provinces of Italy. The bishops of Gaul and Spain, of Thrace and Pontus,
reigned over an ample territory, and delegated their rural suffragans to execute the subordinate
duties of the pastoral office. A Christian diocese might be spread over a province, or reduced to
a village; but all the bishops possessed an equal and indelible character: they all derived the
same powers and privileges from the apostles, from the people, and from the laws. While the
civil and military professions were separated by the policy of Constantine, a new and perpetual
order of ecclesiastical ministers, always respectable, sometimes dangerous, was established in
the church and state. The important review of their station and attributes may be distributed
under the following heads: I. Popular Election. II. Ordination of the Clergy. III. Property. IV.
Civil Jurisdiction. V. Spiritual censures. VI. Exercise of public oratory. VII. Privilege of
legislative assemblies.
I. The freedom of election subsisted long after the legal establishment of Christianity; and the
subjects of Rome enjoyed in the church the privilege which they had lost in the republic, of
choosing the magistrates whom they were bound to obey. As soon as a bishop had closed his
eyes, the metropolitan issued a commission to one of his suffragans to administer the vacant see,
and prepare, within a limited time, the future election. The right of voting was vested in the
inferior clergy, who were best qualified to judge of the merit of the candidates; in the senators or
nobles of the city, all those who were distinguished by their rank or property; and finally in the
whole body of the people, who, on the appointed day, flocked in multitudes from the most
remote parts of the diocese, and sometimes silenced by their tumultuous acclamations, the voice
of reason and the laws of discipline. These acclamations might accidentally fix on the head of
the most deserving competitor; of some ancient presbyter, some holy monk, or some layman,
conspicuous for his zeal and piety. But the episcopal chair was solicited, especially in the great
and opulent cities of the empire, as a temporal rather than as a spiritual dignity. The interested
views, the selfish and angry passions, the arts of perfidy and dissimulation, the secret corruption,
the open and even bloody violence which had formerly disgraced the freedom of election in the
commonwealths of Greece and Rome, too often influenced the choice of the successors of the
apostles. While one of the candidates boasted the honors of his family, a second allured his
judges by the delicacies of a plentiful table, and a third, more guilty than his rivals, offered to
share the plunder of the church among the accomplices of his sacrilegious hopes The civil as
well as ecclesiastical laws attempted to exclude the populace from this solemn and important
transaction. The canons of ancient discipline, by requiring several episcopal qualifications, of
age, station, &c., restrained, in some measure, the indiscriminate caprice of the electors. The
authority of the provincial bishops, who were assembled in the vacant church to consecrate the
choice of the people, was interposed to moderate their passions and to correct their mistakes.
The bishops could refuse to ordain an unworthy candidate, and the rage of contending factions
sometimes accepted their impartial mediation. The submission, or the resistance, of the clergy
and people, on various occasions, afforded different precedents, which were insensibly
converted into positive laws and provincial customs; but it was every where admitted, as a
fundamental maxim of religious policy, that no bishop could be imposed on an orthodox church,
without the consent of its members. The emperors, as the guardians of the public peace, and as
the first citizens of Rome and Constantinople, might effectually declare their wishes in the
choice of a primate; but those absolute monarchs respected the freedom of ecclesiastical
elections; and while they distributed and resumed the honors of the state and army, they allowed
eighteen hundred perpetual magistrates to receive their important offices from the free suffrages
of the people. It was agreeable to the dictates of justice, that these magistrates should not desert
an honorable station from which they could not be removed; but the wisdom of councils
endeavored, without much success, to enforce the residence, and to prevent the translation, of
bishops. The discipline of the West was indeed less relaxed than that of the East; but the same
passions which made those regulations necessary, rendered them ineffectual. The reproaches
which angry prelates have so vehemently urged against each other, serve only to expose their
common guilt, and their mutual indiscretion.
II. The bishops alone possessed the faculty of spiritual generation: and this extraordinary
privilege might compensate, in some degree, for the painful celibacy which was imposed as a
virtue, as a duty, and at length as a positive obligation. The religions of antiquity, which
established a separate order of priests, dedicated a holy race, a tribe or family, to the perpetual
service of the gods. Such institutions were founded for possession, rather than conquest. The
children of the priests enjoyed, with proud and indolent security, their sacred inheritance; and
the fiery spirit of enthusiasm was abated by the cares, the pleasures, and the endearments of
domestic life. But the Christian sanctuary was open to every ambitious candidate, who aspired to
its heavenly promises or temporal possessions. This office of priests, like that of soldiers or
magistrates, was strenuously exercised by those men, whose temper and abilities had prompted
them to embrace the ecclesiastical profession, or who had been selected by a discerning bishop,
as the best qualified to promote the glory and interest of the church. The bishops (till the abuse
was restrained by the prudence of the laws) might constrain the reluctant, and protect the
distressed; and the imposition of hands forever bestowed some of the most valuable privileges of
civil society. The whole body of the Catholic clergy, more numerous perhaps than the legions,
was exempted * by the emperors from all service, private or public, all municipal offices, and all
personal taxes and contributions, which pressed on their fellow-citizens with intolerable weight;
and the duties of their holy profession were accepted as a full discharge of their obligations to
the republic. Each bishop acquired an absolute and indefeasible right to the perpetual obedience
of the clerk whom he ordained: the clergy of each episcopal church, with its dependent parishes,
formed a regular and permanent society; and the cathedrals of Constantinople and Carthage
maintained their peculiar establishment of five hundred ecclesiastical ministers. Their ranks and
numbers were insensibly multiplied by the superstition of the times, which introduced into the
church the splendid ceremonies of a Jewish or Pagan temple; and a long train of priests,
deacons, sub-deacons, acolythes, exorcists, readers, singers, and doorkeepers, contributed, in
their respective stations, to swell the pomp and harmony of religious worship. The clerical name
and privileges were extended to many pious fraternities, who devoutly supported the
ecclesiastical throne. Six hundred parabolani, or adventurers, visited the sick at Alexandria;
eleven hundred copiat, or grave-diggers, buried the dead at Constantinople; and the swarms of
monks, who arose from the Nile, overspread and darkened the face of the Christian world.
Chapter XX: Conversion Of Constantine. -- Part IV.
III. The edict of Milan secured the revenue as well as the peace of the church. The Christians
not only recovered the lands and houses of which they had been stripped by the persecuting laws
of Diocletian, but they acquired a perfect title to all the possessions which they had hitherto
enjoyed by the connivance of the magistrate. As soon as Christianity became the religion of the
emperor and the empire, the national clergy might claim a decent and honorable maintenance;
and the payment of an annual tax might have delivered the people from the more oppressive
tribute, which superstition imposes on her votaries. But as the wants and expenses of the church
increased with her prosperity, the ecclesiastical order was still supported and enriched by the
voluntary oblations of the faithful. Eight years after the edict of Milan, Constantine granted to all
his subjects the free and universal permission of bequeathing their fortunes to the holy Catholic
church; and their devout liberality, which during their lives was checked by luxury or avarice,
flowed with a profuse stream at the hour of their death. The wealthy Christians were encouraged
by the example of their sovereign. An absolute monarch, who is rich without patrimony, may be
charitable without merit; and Constantine too easily believed that he should purchase the favor
of Heaven, if he maintained the idle at the expense of the industrious; and distributed among the
saints the wealth of the republic. The same messenger who carried over to Africa the head of
Maxentius, might be intrusted with an epistle to Cæcilian, bishop of Carthage. The emperor
acquaints him, that the treasurers of the province are directed to pay into his hands the sum of
three thousand folles, or eighteen thousand pounds sterling, and to obey his further requisitions
for the relief of the churches of Africa, Numidia, and Mauritania. The liberality of Constantine
increased in a just proportion to his faith, and to his vices. He assigned in each city a regular
allowance of corn, to supply the fund of ecclesiastical charity; and the persons of both sexes who
embraced the monastic life became the peculiar favorites of their sovereign. The Christian
temples of Antioch, Alexandria, Jerusalem, Constantinople &c., displayed the ostentatious piety
of a prince, ambitious in a declining age to equal the perfect labors of antiquity. The form of
these religious edifices was simple and oblong; though they might sometimes swell into the
shape of a dome, and sometimes branch into the figure of a cross. The timbers were framed for
the most part of cedars of Libanus; the roof was covered with tiles, perhaps of gilt brass; and the
walls, the columns, the pavement, were encrusted with variegated marbles. The most precious
ornaments of gold and silver, of silk and gems, were profusely dedicated to the service of the
altar; and this specious magnificence was supported on the solid and perpetual basis of landed
property. In the space of two centuries, from the reign of Constantine to that of Justinian, the
eighteen hundred churches of the empire were enriched by the frequent and unalienable gifts of
the prince and people. An annual income of six hundred pounds sterling may be reasonably
assigned to the bishops, who were placed at an equal distance between riches and poverty, but
the standard of their wealth insensibly rose with the dignity and opulence of the cities which they
governed. An authentic but imperfect rent-roll specifies some houses, shops, gardens, and
farms, which belonged to the three Basilic of Rome, St. Peter, St. Paul, and St. John Lateran, in
the provinces of Italy, Africa, and the East. They produce, besides a reserved rent of oil, linen,
paper, aromatics, &c., a clear annual revenue of twenty-two thousand pieces of gold, or twelve
thousand pounds sterling. In the age of Constantine and Justinian, the bishops no longer
possessed, perhaps they no longer deserved, the unsuspecting confidence of their clergy and
people. The ecclesiastical revenues of each diocese were divided into four parts for the
respective uses of the bishop himself, of his inferior clergy, of the poor, and of the public
worship; and the abuse of this sacred trust was strictly and repeatedly checked. The patrimony
of the church was still subject to all the public compositions of the state. The clergy of Rome,
Alexandria, Thessalonica, &c., might solicit and obtain some partial exemptions; but the
premature attempt of the great council of Rimini, which aspired to universal freedom, was
successfully resisted by the son of Constantine.
IV. The Latin clergy, who erected their tribunal on the ruins of the civil and common law, have
modestly accepted, as the gift of Constantine, the independent jurisdiction, which was the fruit
of time, of accident, and of their own industry. But the liberality of the Christian emperors had
actually endowed them with some legal prerogatives, which secured and dignified the sacerdotal
character. 1. Under a despotic government, the bishops alone enjoyed and asserted the
inestimable privilege of being tried only by their peers; and even in a capital accusation, a synod
of their brethren were the sole judges of their guilt or innocence. Such a tribunal, unless it was
inflamed by personal resentment or religious discord, might be favorable, or even partial, to the
sacerdotal order: but Constantine was satisfied, that secret impunity would be less pernicious
than public scandal: and the Nicene council was edited by his public declaration, that if he
surprised a bishop in the act of adultery, he should cast his Imperial mantle over the episcopal
sinner. 2. The domestic jurisdiction of the bishops was at once a privilege and a restraint of the
ecclesiastical order, whose civil causes were decently withdrawn from the cognizance of a
secular judge. Their venial offences were not exposed to the shame of a public trial or
punishment; and the gentle correction which the tenderness of youth may endure from its parents
or instructors, was inflicted by the temperate severity of the bishops. But if the clergy were guilty
of any crime which could not be sufficiently expiated by their degradation from an honorable
and beneficial profession, the Roman magistrate drew the sword of justice, without any regard to
ecclesiastical immunities. 3. The arbitration of the bishops was ratified by a positive law; and
the judges were instructed to execute, without appeal or delay, the episcopal decrees, whose
validity had hitherto depended on the consent of the parties. The conversion of the magistrates
themselves, and of the whole empire, might gradually remove the fears and scruples of the
Christians. But they still resorted to the tribunal of the bishops, whose abilities and integrity they
esteemed; and the venerable Austin enjoyed the satisfaction of complaining that his spiritual
functions were perpetually interrupted by the invidious labor of deciding the claim or the
possession of silver and gold, of lands and cattle. 4. The ancient privilege of sanctuary was
transferred to the Christian temples, and extended, by the liberal piety of the younger
Theodosius, to the precincts of consecrated ground. The fugitive, and even guilty, suppliants
were permitted to implore either the justice, or the mercy, of the Deity and his ministers. The
rash violence of despotism was suspended by the mild interposition of the church; and the lives
or fortunes of the most eminent subjects might be protected by the mediation of the bishop.
V. The bishop was the perpetual censor of the morals of his people The discipline of penance
was digested into a system of canonical jurisprudence, which accurately defined the duty of
private or public confession, the rules of evidence, the degrees of guilt, and the measure of
punishment. It was impossible to execute this spiritual censure, if the Christian pontiff, who
punished the obscure sins of the multitude, respected the conspicuous vices and destructive
crimes of the magistrate: but it was impossible to arraign the conduct of the magistrate, without,
controlling the administration of civil government. Some considerations of religion, or loyalty,
or fear, protected the sacred persons of the emperors from the zeal or resentment of the bishops;
but they boldly censured and excommunicated the subordinate tyrants, who were not invested
with the majesty of the purple. St. Athanasius excommunicated one of the ministers of Egypt;
and the interdict which he pronounced, of fire and water, was solemnly transmitted to the
churches of Cappadocia. Under the reign of the younger Theodosius, the polite and eloquent
Synesius, one of the descendants of Hercules, filled the episcopal seat of Ptolemais, near the
ruins of ancient Cyrene, and the philosophic bishop supported with dignity the character which
he had assumed with reluctance. He vanquished the monster of Libya, the president Andronicus,
who abused the authority of a venal office, invented new modes of rapine and torture, and
aggravated the guilt of oppression by that of sacrilege. After a fruitless attempt to reclaim the
haughty magistrate by mild and religious admonition, Synesius proceeds to inflict the last
sentence of ecclesiastical justice, which devotes Andronicus, with his associates and their
families, to the abhorrence of earth and heaven. The impenitent sinners, more cruel than Phalaris
or Sennacherib, more destructive than war, pestilence, or a cloud of locusts, are deprived of the
name and privileges of Christians, of the participation of the sacraments, and of the hope of
Paradise. The bishop exhorts the clergy, the magistrates, and the people, to renounce all society
with the enemies of Christ; to exclude them from their houses and tables; and to refuse them the
common offices of life, and the decent rites of burial. The church of Ptolemais, obscure and
contemptible as she may appear, addresses this declaration to all her sister churches of the
world; and the profane who reject her decrees, will be involved in the guilt and punishment of
Andronicus and his impious followers. These spiritual terrors were enforced by a dexterous
application to the Byzantine court; the trembling president implored the mercy of the church;
and the descendants of Hercules enjoyed the satisfaction of raising a prostrate tyrant from the
ground. Such principles and such examples insensibly prepared the triumph of the Roman
pontiffs, who have trampled on the necks of kings.
VI. Every popular government has experienced the effects of rude or artificial eloquence. The
coldest nature is animated, the firmest reason is moved, by the rapid communication of the
prevailing impulse; and each hearer is affected by his own passions, and by those of the
surrounding multitude. The ruin of civil liberty had silenced the demagogues of Athens, and the
tribunes of Rome; the custom of preaching which seems to constitute a considerable part of
Christian devotion, had not been introduced into the temples of antiquity; and the ears of
monarchs were never invaded by the harsh sound of popular eloquence, till the pulpits of the
empire were filled with sacred orators, who possessed some advantages unknown to their
profane predecessors. The arguments and rhetoric of the tribune were instantly opposed with
equal arms, by skilful and resolute antagonists; and the cause of truth and reason might derive an
accidental support from the conflict of hostile passions. The bishop, or some distinguished
presbyter, to whom he cautiously delegated the powers of preaching, harangued, without the
danger of interruption or reply, a submissive multitude, whose minds had been prepared and
subdued by the awful ceremonies of religion. Such was the strict subordination of the Catholic
church, that the same concerted sounds might issue at once from a hundred pulpits of Italy or
Egypt, if they were tuned by the master hand of the Roman or Alexandrian primate. The design
of this institution was laudable, but the fruits were not always salutary. The preachers
recommended the practice of the social duties; but they exalted the perfection of monastic
virtue, which is painful to the individual, and useless to mankind. Their charitable exhortations
betrayed a secret wish that the clergy might be permitted to manage the wealth of the faithful,
for the benefit of the poor. The most sublime representations of the attributes and laws of the
Deity were sullied by an idle mixture of metaphysical subtleties, puerile rites, and fictitious
miracles: and they expatiated, with the most fervent zeal, on the religious merit of hating the
adversaries, and obeying the ministers of the church. When the public peace was distracted by
heresy and schism, the sacred orators sounded the trumpet of discord, and, perhaps, of sedition.
The understandings of their congregations were perplexed by mystery, their passions were
inflamed by invectives; and they rushed from the Christian temples of Antioch or Alexandria,
prepared either to suffer or to inflict martyrdom. The corruption of taste and language is strongly
marked in the vehement declamations of the Latin bishops; but the compositions of Gregory and
Chrysostom have been compared with the most splendid models of Attic, or at least of Asiatic,
eloquence.
VII. The representatives of the Christian republic were regularly assembled in the spring and
autumn of each year; and these synods diffused the spirit of ecclesiastical discipline and
legislation through the hundred and twenty provinces of the Roman world. The archbishop or
metropolitan was empowered, by the laws, to summon the suffragan bishops of his province; to
revise their conduct, to vindicate their rights, to declare their faith, and to examine the merits of
the candidates who were elected by the clergy and people to supply the vacancies of the
episcopal college. The primates of Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, Carthage, and afterwards
Constantinople, who exercised a more ample jurisdiction, convened the numerous assembly of
their dependent bishops. But the convocation of great and extraordinary synods was the
prerogative of the emperor alone. Whenever the emergencies of the church required this decisive
measure, he despatched a peremptory summons to the bishops, or the deputies of each province,
with an order for the use of post-horses, and a competent allowance for the expenses of their
journey. At an early period, when Constantine was the protector, rather than the proselyte, of
Christianity, he referred the African controversy to the council of Arles; in which the bishops of
York of Treves, of Milan, and of Carthage, met as friends and brethren, to debate in their native
tongue on the common interest of the Latin or Western church. Eleven years afterwards, a more
numerous and celebrated assembly was convened at Nice in Bithynia, to extinguish, by their
final sentence, the subtle disputes which had arisen in Egypt on the subject of the Trinity. Three
hundred and eighteen bishops obeyed the summons of their indulgent master; the ecclesiastics of
every rank, and sect, and denomination, have been computed at two thousand and forty-eight
persons; the Greeks appeared in person; and the consent of the Latins was expressed by the
legates of the Roman pontiff. The session, which lasted about two months, was frequently
honored by the presence of the emperor. Leaving his guards at the door, he seated himself (with
the permission of the council) on a low stool in the midst of the hall. Constantine listened with
patience, and spoke with modesty: and while he influenced the debates, he humbly professed
that he was the minister, not the judge, of the successors of the apostles, who had been
established as priests and as gods upon earth. Such profound reverence of an absolute monarch
towards a feeble and unarmed assembly of his own subjects, can only be compared to the respect
with which the senate had been treated by the Roman princes who adopted the policy of
Augustus. Within the space of fifty years, a philosophic spectator of the vicissitudes of human
affairs might have contemplated Tacitus in the senate of Rome, and Constantine in the council
of Nice. The fathers of the Capitol and those of the church had alike degenerated from the
virtues of their founders; but as the bishops were more deeply rooted in the public opinion, they
sustained their dignity with more decent pride, and sometimes opposed with a manly spirit the
wishes of their sovereign. The progress of time and superstition erased the memory of the
weakness, the passion, the ignorance, which disgraced these ecclesiastical synods; and the
Catholic world has unanimously submitted to the infallible decrees of the general councils.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church.
Part I.
Persecution Of Heresy. -- The Schism Of The Donatists. -- The Arian Controversy. --
Athanasius. -- Distracted State Of The Church And Empire Under Constantine And His Sons. --
Toleration Of Paganism.
The grateful applause of the clergy has consecrated the memory of a prince who indulged their
passions and promoted their interest. Constantine gave them security, wealth, honors, and
revenge; and the support of the orthodox faith was considered as the most sacred and important
duty of the civil magistrate. The edict of Milan, the great charter of toleration, had confirmed to
each individual of the Roman world the privilege of choosing and professing his own religion.
But this inestimable privilege was soon violated; with the knowledge of truth, the emperor
imbibed the maxims of persecution; and the sects which dissented from the Catholic church
were afflicted and oppressed by the triumph of Christianity. Constantine easily believed that the
Heretics, who presumed to dispute hisopinions, or to oppose his commands, were guilty of the
most absurd and criminal obstinacy; and that a seasonable application of moderate severities
might save those unhappy men from the danger of an everlasting condemnation. Not a moment
was lost in excluding the ministers and teachers of the separated congregations from any share of
the rewards and immunities which the emperor had so liberally bestowed on the orthodox clergy.
But as the sectaries might still exist under the cloud of royal disgrace, the conquest of the East
was immediately followed by an edict which announced their total destruction. After a
preamble filled with passion and reproach, Constantine absolutely prohibits the assemblies of
the Heretics, and confiscates their public property to the use either of the revenue or of the
Catholic church. The sects against whom the Imperial severity was directed, appear to have been
the adherents of Paul of Samosata; the Montanists of Phrygia, who maintained an enthusiastic
succession of prophecy; the Novatians, who sternly rejected the temporal efficacy of repentance;
the Marcionites and Valentinians, under whose leading banners the various Gnostics of Asia and
Egypt had insensibly rallied; and perhaps the Manichæans, who had recently imported from
Persia a more artful composition of Oriental and Christian theology. The design of extirpating
the name, or at least of restraining the progress, of these odious Heretics, was prosecuted with
vigor and effect. Some of the penal regulations were copied from the edicts of Diocletian; and
this method of conversion was applauded by the same bishops who had felt the hand of
oppression, and pleaded for the rights of humanity. Two immaterial circumstances may serve,
however, to prove that the mind of Constantine was not entirely corrupted by the spirit of zeal
and bigotry. Before he condemned the Manichæans and their kindred sects, he resolved to make
an accurate inquiry into the nature of their religious principles. As if he distrusted the
impartiality of his ecclesiastical counsellors, this delicate commission was intrusted to a civil
magistrate, whose learning and moderation he justly esteemed, and of whose venal character he
was probably ignorant. The emperor was soon convinced, that he had too hastily proscribed the
orthodox faith and the exemplary morals of the Novatians, who had dissented from the church in
some articles of discipline which were not perhaps essential to salvation. By a particular edict,
he exempted them from the general penalties of the law; allowed them to build a church at
Constantinople, respected the miracles of their saints, invited their bishop Acesius to the council
of Nice; and gently ridiculed the narrow tenets of his sect by a familiar jest; which, from the
mouth of a sovereign, must have been received with applause and gratitude.
The complaints and mutual accusations which assailed the throne of Constantine, as soon as the
death of Maxentius had submitted Africa to his victorious arms, were ill adapted to edify an
imperfect proselyte. He learned, with surprise, that the provinces of that great country, from the
confines of Cyrene to the columns of Hercules, were distracted with religious discord. The
source of the division was derived from a double election in the church of Carthage; the second,
in rank and opulence, of the ecclesiastical thrones of the West. Cæcilian and Majorinus were the
two rival prelates of Africa; and the death of the latter soon made room for Donatus, who, by his
superior abilities and apparent virtues, was the firmest support of his party. The advantage which
Cæcilian might claim from the priority of his ordination, was destroyed by the illegal, or at least
indecent, haste, with which it had been performed, without expecting the arrival of the bishops
of Numidia. The authority of these bishops, who, to the number of seventy, condemned
Cæcilian, and consecrated Majorinus, is again weakened by the infamy of some of their personal
characters; and by the female intrigues, sacrilegious bargains, and tumultuous proceedings,
which are imputed to this Numidian council. The bishops of the contending factions
maintained, with equal ardor and obstinacy, that their adversaries were degraded, or at least
dishonored, by the odious crime of delivering the Holy Scriptures to the officers of Diocletian.
From their mutual reproaches, as well as from the story of this dark transaction, it may justly be
inferred, that the late persecution had imbittered the zeal, without reforming the manners, of the
African Christians. That divided church was incapable of affording an impartial judicature; the
controversy was solemnly tried in five successive tribunals, which were appointed by the
emperor; and the whole proceeding, from the first appeal to the final sentence, lasted above
three years. A severe inquisition, which was taken by the Prætorian vicar, and the proconsul of
Africa, the report of two episcopal visitors who had been sent to Carthage, the decrees of the
councils of Rome and of Arles, and the supreme judgment of Constantine himself in his sacred
consistory, were all favorable to the cause of Cæcilian; and he was unanimously acknowledged
by the civil and ecclesiastical powers, as the true and lawful primate of Africa. The honors and
estates of the church were attributed to his suffragan bishops, and it was not without difficulty,
that Constantine was satisfied with inflicting the punishment of exile on the principal leaders of
the Donatist faction. As their cause was examined with attention, perhaps it was determined with
justice. Perhaps their complaint was not without foundation, that the credulity of the emperor
had been abused by the insidious arts of his favorite Osius. The influence of falsehood and
corruption might procure the condemnation of the innocent, or aggravate the sentence of the
guilty. Such an act, however, of injustice, if it concluded an importunate dispute, might be
numbered among the transient evils of a despotic administration, which are neither felt nor
remembered by posterity.
But this incident, so inconsiderable that it scarcely deserves a place in history, was productive of
a memorable schism which afflicted the provinces of Africa above three hundred years, and was
extinguished only with Christianity itself. The inflexible zeal of freedom and fanaticism
animated the Donatists to refuse obedience to the usurpers, whose election they disputed, and
whose spiritual powers they denied. Excluded from the civil and religious communion of
mankind, they boldly excommunicated the rest of mankind, who had embraced the impious
party of Cæcilian, and of the Traditors, from which he derived his pretended ordination. They
asserted with confidence, and almost with exultation, that the Apostolical succession was
interrupted; that all the bishops of Europe and Asia were infected by the contagion of guilt and
schism; and that the prerogatives of the Catholic church were confined to the chosen portion of
the African believers, who alone had preserved inviolate the integrity of their faith and
discipline. This rigid theory was supported by the most uncharitable conduct. Whenever they
acquired a proselyte, even from the distant provinces of the East, they carefully repeated the
sacred rites of baptism and ordination; as they rejected the validity of those which he had
already received from the hands of heretics or schismatics. Bishops, virgins, and even spotless
infants, were subjected to the disgrace of a public penance, before they could be admitted to the
communion of the Donatists. If they obtained possession of a church which had been used by
their Catholic adversaries, they purified the unhallowed building with the same zealous care
which a temple of idols might have required. They washed the pavement, scraped the walls,
burnt the altar, which was commonly of wood, melted the consecrated plate, and cast the Holy
Eucharist to the dogs, with every circumstance of ignominy which could provoke and perpetuate
the animosity of religious factions. Notwithstanding this irreconcilable aversion, the two parties,
who were mixed and separated in all the cities of Africa, had the same language and manners,
the same zeal and learning, the same faith and worship. Proscribed by the civil and ecclesiastical
powers of the empire, the Donatists still maintained in some provinces, particularly in Numidia,
their superior numbers; and four hundred bishops acknowledged the jurisdiction of their primate.
But the invincible spirit of the sect sometimes preyed on its own vitals: and the bosom of their
schismatical church was torn by intestine divisions. A fourth part of the Donatist bishops
followed the independent standard of the Maximianists. The narrow and solitary path which
their first leaders had marked out, continued to deviate from the great society of mankind. Even
the imperceptible sect of the Rogatians could affirm, without a blush, that when Christ should
descend to judge the earth, he would find his true religion preserved only in a few nameless
villages of the Cæsarean Mauritania.
The schism of the Donatists was confined to Africa: the more diffusive mischief of the
Trinitarian controversy successively penetrated into every part of the Christian world. The
former was an accidental quarrel, occasioned by the abuse of freedom; the latter was a high and
mysterious argument, derived from the abuse of philosophy. From the age of Constantine to that
of Clovis and Theodoric, the temporal interests both of the Romans and Barbarians were deeply
involved in the theological disputes of Arianism. The historian may therefore be permitted
respectfully to withdraw the veil of the sanctuary; and to deduce the progress of reason and faith,
of error and passion from the school of Plato, to the decline and fall of the empire.
The genius of Plato, informed by his own meditation, or by the traditional knowledge of the
priests of Egypt, had ventured to explore the mysterious nature of the Deity. When he had
elevated his mind to the sublime contemplation of the first self-existent, necessary cause of the
universe, the Athenian sage was incapable of conceiving how the simple unity of his essence
could admit the infinite variety of distinct and successive ideas which compose the model of the
intellectual world; how a Being purely incorporeal could execute that perfect model, and mould
with a plastic hand the rude and independent chaos. The vain hope of extricating himself from
these difficulties, which must ever oppress the feeble powers of the human mind, might induce
Plato to consider the divine nature under the threefold modification -- of the first cause, the
reason, or Logos, and the soul or spirit of the universe. His poetical imagination sometimes fixed
and animated these metaphysical abstractions; the three archical on original principles were
represented in the Platonic system as three Gods, united with each other by a mysterious and
ineffable generation; and the Logos was particularly considered under the more accessible
character of the Son of an Eternal Father, and the Creator and Governor of the world. Such
appear to have been the secret doctrines which were cautiously whispered in the gardens of the
academy; and which, according to the more recent disciples of Plato, * could not be perfectly
understood, till after an assiduous study of thirty years.
The arms of the Macedonians diffused over Asia and Egypt the language and learning of Greece;
and the theological system of Plato was taught, with less reserve, and perhaps with some
improvements, in the celebrated school of Alexandria. A numerous colony of Jews had been
invited, by the favor of the Ptolemies, to settle in their new capital. While the bulk of the nation
practised the legal ceremonies, and pursued the lucrative occupations of commerce, a few
Hebrews, of a more liberal spirit, devoted their lives to religious and philosophical
contemplation. They cultivated with diligence, and embraced with ardor, the theological system
of the Athenian sage. But their national pride would have been mortified by a fair confession of
their former poverty: and they boldly marked, as the sacred inheritance of their ancestors, the
gold and jewels which they had so lately stolen from their Egyptian masters. One hundred years
before the birth of Christ, a philosophical treatise, which manifestly betrays the style and
sentiments of the school of Plato, was produced by the Alexandrian Jews, and unanimously
received as a genuine and valuable relic of the inspired Wisdom of Solomon. A similar union of
the Mosaic faith and the Grecian philosophy, distinguishes the works of Philo, which were
composed, for the most part, under the reign of Augustus. The material soul of the universe
might offend the piety of the Hebrews: but they applied the character of the Logos to the Jehovah
of Moses and the patriarchs; and the Son of God was introduced upon earth under a visible, and
even human appearance, to perform those familiar offices which seem incompatible with the
nature and attributes of the Universal Cause.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church. -- Part II.
The eloquence of Plato, the name of Solomon, the authority of the school of Alexandria, and the
consent of the Jews and Greeks, were insufficient to establish the truth of a mysterious doctrine,
which might please, but could not satisfy, a rational mind. A prophet, or apostle, inspired by the
Deity, can alone exercise a lawful dominion over the faith of mankind: and the theology of Plato
might have been forever confounded with the philosophical visions of the Academy, the Porch,
and the Lycæum, if the name and divine attributes of the Logos had not been confirmed by the
celestial pen of the last and most sublime of the Evangelists. The Christian Revelation, which
was consummated under the reign of Nerva, disclosed to the world the amazing secret, that the
Logos, who was with God from the beginning, and was God, who had made all things, and for
whom all things had been made, was incarnate in the person of Jesus of Nazareth; who had been
born of a virgin, and suffered death on the cross. Besides the genera design of fixing on a
perpetual basis the divine honors of Christ, the most ancient and respectable of the ecclesiastical
writers have ascribed to the evangelic theologian a particular intention to confute two opposite
heresies, which disturbed the peace of the primitive church. I. The faith of the Ebionites,
perhaps of the Nazarenes, was gross and imperfect. They revered Jesus as the greatest of the
prophets, endowed with supernatural virtue and power. They ascribed to his person and to his
future reign all the predictions of the Hebrew oracles which relate to the spiritual and everlasting
kingdom of the promised Messiah. Some of them might confess that he was born of a virgin;
but they obstinately rejected the preceding existence and divine perfections of the Logos, or Son
of God, which are so clearly defined in the Gospel of St. John. About fifty years afterwards, the
Ebionites, whose errors are mentioned by Justin Martyr with less severity than they seem to
deserve, formed a very inconsiderable portion of the Christian name. II. The Gnostics, who were
distinguished by the epithet of Docetes, deviated into the contrary extreme; and betrayed the
human, while they asserted the divine, nature of Christ. Educated in the school of Plato,
accustomed to the sublime idea of the Logos, they readily conceived that the brightest Æon, or
Emanation of the Deity, might assume the outward shape and visible appearances of a mortal;
but they vainly pretended, that the imperfections of matter are incompatible with the purity of a
celestial substance. While the blood of Christ yet smoked on Mount Calvary, the Docetes
invented the impious and extravagant hypothesis, that, instead of issuing from the womb of the
Virgin, he had descended on the banks of the Jordan in the form of perfect manhood; that he
had imposed on the senses of his enemies, and of his disciples; and that the ministers of Pilate
had wasted their impotent rage on an airy phantom, who seemed to expire on the cross, and,
after three days, to rise from the dead.
The divine sanction, which the Apostle had bestowed on the fundamental principle of the
theology of Plato, encouraged the learned proselytes of the second and third centuries to admire
and study the writings of the Athenian sage, who had thus marvellously anticipated one of the
most surprising discoveries of the Christian revelation. The respectable name of Plato was used
by the orthodox, and abused by the heretics, as the common support of truth and error: the
authority of his skilful commentators, and the science of dialectics, were employed to justify the
remote consequences of his opinions and to supply the discreet silence of the inspired writers.
The same subtle and profound questions concerning the nature, the generation, the distinction,
and the equality of the three divine persons of the mysterious Triad, or Trinity, were agitated in
the philosophical and in the Christian schools of Alexandria. An eager spirit of curiosity urged
them to explore the secrets of the abyss; and the pride of the professors, and of their disciples,
was satisfied with the sciences of words. But the most sagacious of the Christian theologians, the
great Athanasius himself, has candidly confessed, that whenever he forced his understanding to
meditate on the divinity of the Logos, his toilsome and unavailing efforts recoiled on
themselves; that the more he thought, the less he comprehended; and the more he wrote, the less
capable was he of expressing his thoughts. In every step of the inquiry, we are compelled to feel
and acknowledge the immeasurable disproportion between the size of the object and the capacity
of the human mind. We may strive to abstract the notions of time, of space, and of matter, which
so closely adhere to all the perceptions of our experimental knowledge. But as soon as we
presume to reason of infinite substance, of spiritual generation; as often as we deduce any
positive conclusions from a negative idea, we are involved in darkness, perplexity, and
inevitable contradiction. As these difficulties arise from the nature of the subject, they oppress,
with the same insuperable weight, the philosophic and the theological disputant; but we may
observe two essential and peculiar circumstances, which discriminated the doctrines of the
Catholic church from the opinions of the Platonic school.
I. A chosen society of philosophers, men of a liberal education and curious disposition, might
silently meditate, and temperately discuss in the gardens of Athens or the library of Alexandria,
the abstruse questions of metaphysical science. The lofty speculations, which neither convinced
the understanding, nor agitated the passions, of the Platonists themselves, were carelessly
overlooked by the idle, the busy, and even the studious part of mankind. But after the Logos had
been revealed as the sacred object of the faith, the hope, and the religious worship of the
Christians, the mysterious system was embraced by a numerous and increasing multitude in
every province of the Roman world. Those persons who, from their age, or sex, or occupations,
were the least qualified to judge, who were the least exercised in the habits of abstract reasoning,
aspired to contemplate the economy of the Divine Nature: and it is the boast of Tertullian, that a
Christian mechanic could readily answer such questions as had perplexed the wisest of the
Grecian sages. Where the subject lies so far beyond our reach, the difference between the highest
and the lowest of human understandings may indeed be calculated as infinitely small; yet the
degree of weakness may perhaps be measured by the degree of obstinacy and dogmatic
confidence. These speculations, instead of being treated as the amusement of a vacant hour,
became the most serious business of the present, and the most useful preparation for a future,
life. A theology, which it was incumbent to believe, which it was impious to doubt, and which it
might be dangerous, and even fatal, to mistake, became the familiar topic of private meditation
and popular discourse. The cold indifference of philosophy was inflamed by the fervent spirit of
devotion; and even the metaphors of common language suggested the fallacious prejudices of
sense and experience. The Christians, who abhorred the gross and impure generation of the
Greek mythology, were tempted to argue from the familiar analogy of the filial and paternal
relations. The character of Son seemed to imply a perpetual subordination to the voluntary
author of his existence; but as the act of generation, in the most spiritual and abstracted sense,
must be supposed to transmit the properties of a common nature, they durst not presume to
circumscribe the powers or the duration of the Son of an eternal and omnipotent Father.
Fourscore years after the death of Christ, the Christians of Bithynia, declared before the tribunal
of Pliny, that they invoked him as a god: and his divine honors have been perpetuated in every
age and country, by the various sects who assume the name of his disciples. Their tender
reverence for the memory of Christ, and their horror for the profane worship of any created
being, would have engaged them to assert the equal and absolute divinity of the Logos, if their
rapid ascent towards the throne of heaven had not been imperceptibly checked by the
apprehension of violating the unity and sole supremacy of the great Father of Christ and of the
Universe. The suspense and fluctuation produced in the minds of the Christians by these
opposite tendencies, may be observed in the writings of the theologians who flourished after the
end of the apostolic age, and before the origin of the Arian controversy. Their suffrage is
claimed, with equal confidence, by the orthodox and by the heretical parties; and the most
inquisitive critics have fairly allowed, that if they had the good fortune of possessing the
Catholic verity, they have delivered their conceptions in loose, inaccurate, and sometimes
contradictory language.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church. -- Part III.
II. The devotion of individuals was the first circumstance which distinguished the Christians
from the Platonists: the second was the authority of the church. The disciples of philosophy
asserted the rights of intellectual freedom, and their respect for the sentiments of their teachers
was a liberal and voluntary tribute, which they offered to superior reason. But the Christians
formed a numerous and disciplined society; and the jurisdiction of their laws and magistrates
was strictly exercised over the minds of the faithful. The loose wanderings of the imagination
were gradually confined by creeds and confessions; the freedom of private judgment submitted
to the public wisdom of synods; the authority of a theologian was determined by his
ecclesiastical rank; and the episcopal successors of the apostles inflicted the censures of the
church on those who deviated from the orthodox belief. But in an age of religious controversy,
every act of oppression adds new force to the elastic vigor of the mind; and the zeal or obstinacy
of a spiritual rebel was sometimes stimulated by secret motives of ambition or avarice. A
metaphysical argument became the cause or pretence of political contests; the subtleties of the
Platonic school were used as the badges of popular factions, and the distance which separated
their respective tenets were enlarged or magnified by the acrimony of dispute. As long as the
dark heresies of Praxeas and Sabellius labored to confound the Father with the Son, the
orthodox party might be excused if they adhered more strictly and more earnestly to the
distinction, than to the equality, of the divine persons. But as soon as the heat of controversy had
subsided, and the progress of the Sabellians was no longer an object of terror to the churches of
Rome, of Africa, or of Egypt, the tide of theological opinion began to flow with a gentle but
steady motion towards the contrary extreme; and the most orthodox doctors allowed themselves
the use of the terms and definitions which had been censured in the mouth of the sectaries. After
the edict of toleration had restored peace and leisure to the Christians, the Trinitarian
controversy was revived in the ancient seat of Platonism, the learned, the opulent, the
tumultuous city of Alexandria; and the flame of religious discord was rapidly communicated
from the schools to the clergy, the people, the province, and the East. The abstruse question of
the eternity of the Logos was agitated in ecclesiastic conferences and popular sermons; and the
heterodox opinions of Arius were soon made public by his own zeal, and by that of his
adversaries. His most implacable adversaries have acknowledged the learning and blameless life
of that eminent presbyter, who, in a former election, had declared, and perhaps generously
declined, his pretensions to the episcopal throne. His competitor Alexander assumed the office
of his judge. The important cause was argued before him; and if at first he seemed to hesitate, he
at length pronounced his final sentence, as an absolute rule of faith. The undaunted presbyter,
who presumed to resist the authority of his angry bishop, was separated from the community of
the church. But the pride of Arius was supported by the applause of a numerous party. He
reckoned among his immediate followers two bishops of Egypt, seven presbyters, twelve
deacons, and (what may appear almost incredible) seven hundred virgins. A large majority of the
bishops of Asia appeared to support or favor his cause; and their measures were conducted by
Eusebius of Cæsarea, the most learned of the Christian prelates; and by Eusebius of Nicomedia,
who had acquired the reputation of a statesman without forfeiting that of a saint. Synods in
Palestine and Bithynia were opposed to the synods of Egypt. The attention of the prince and
people was attracted by this theological dispute; and the decision, at the end of six years, was
referred to the supreme authority of the general council of Nice.
When the mysteries of the Christian faith were dangerously exposed to public debate, it might be
observed, that the human understanding was capable of forming three district, though imperfect
systems, concerning the nature of the Divine Trinity; and it was pronounced, that none of these
systems, in a pure and absolute sense, were exempt from heresy and error. I. According to the
first hypothesis, which was maintained by Arius and his disciples, the Logos was a dependent
and spontaneous production, created from nothing by the will of the father. The Son, by whom
all things were made, had been begotten before all worlds, and the longest of the astronomical
periods could be compared only as a fleeting moment to the extent of his duration; yet this
duration was not infinite, and there had been a time which preceded the ineffable generation of
the Logos. On this only-begotten Son, the Almighty Father had transfused his ample spirit, and
impressed the effulgence of his glory. Visible image of invisible perfection, he saw, at an
immeasurable distance beneath his feet, the thrones of the brightest archangels; yet he shone
only with a reflected light, and, like the sons of the Romans emperors, who were invested with
the titles of Cæsar or Augustus, he governed the universe in obedience to the will of his Father
and Monarch. II. In the second hypothesis, the Logos possessed all the inherent, incommunicable
perfections, which religion and philosophy appropriate to the Supreme God. Three distinct and
infinite minds or substances, three coëqual and coëternal beings, composed the Divine Essence;
and it would have implied contradiction, that any of them should not have existed, or that they
should ever cease to exist. The advocates of a system which seemed to establish three
independent Deities, attempted to preserve the unity of the First Cause, so conspicuous in the
design and order of the world, by the perpetual concord of their administration, and the essential
agreement of their will. A faint resemblance of this unity of action may be discovered in the
societies of men, and even of animals. The causes which disturb their harmony, proceed only
from the imperfection and inequality of their faculties; but the omnipotence which is guided by
infinite wisdom and goodness, cannot fail of choosing the same means for the accomplishment
of the same ends. III. Three beings, who, by the self-derived necessity of their existence, possess
all the divine attributes in the most perfect degree; who are eternal in duration, infinite in space,
and intimately present to each other, and to the whole universe; irresistibly force themselves on
the astonished mind, as one and the same being, who, in the economy of grace, as well as in that
of nature, may manifest himself under different forms, and be considered under different
aspects. By this hypothesis, a real substantial trinity is refined into a trinity of names, and
abstract modifications, that subsist only in the mind which conceives them. The Logos is no
longer a person, but an attribute; and it is only in a figurative sense that the epithet of Son can be
applied to the eternal reason, which was with God from the beginning, and by which, not by
whom, all things were made. The incarnation of the Logos is reduced to a mere inspiration of
the Divine Wisdom, which filled the soul, and directed all the actions, of the man Jesus. Thus,
after revolving around the theological circle, we are surprised to find that the Sabellian ends
where the Ebionite had begun; and that the incomprehensible mystery which excites our
adoration, eludes our inquiry.
If the bishops of the council of Nice had been permitted to follow the unbiased dictates of their
conscience, Arius and his associates could scarcely have flattered themselves with the hopes of
obtaining a majority of votes, in favor of an hypothesis so directly averse to the two most
popular opinions of the Catholic world. The Arians soon perceived the danger of their situation,
and prudently assumed those modest virtues, which, in the fury of civil and religious dissensions,
are seldom practised, or even praised, except by the weaker party. They recommended the
exercise of Christian charity and moderation; urged the incomprehensible nature of the
controversy, disclaimed the use of any terms or definitions which could not be found in the
Scriptures; and offered, by very liberal concessions, to satisfy their adversaries without
renouncing the integrity of their own principles. The victorious faction received all their
proposals with haughty suspicion; and anxiously sought for some irreconcilable mark of
distinction, the rejection of which might involve the Arians in the guilt and consequences of
heresy. A letter was publicly read, and ignominiously torn, in which their patron, Eusebius of
Nicomedia, ingenuously confessed, that the admission of the Homoousion, or Consubstantial, a
word already familiar to the Platonists, was incompatible with the principles of their theological
system. The fortunate opportunity was eagerly embraced by the bishops, who governed the
resolutions of the synod; and, according to the lively expression of Ambrose, they used the
sword, which heresy itself had drawn from the scabbard, to cut off the head of the hated
monster. The consubstantiality of the Father and the Son was established by the council of Nice,
and has been unanimously received as a fundamental article of the Christian faith, by the consent
of the Greek, the Latin, the Oriental, and the Protestant churches. But if the same word had not
served to stigmatize the heretics, and to unite the Catholics, it would have been inadequate to the
purpose of the majority, by whom it was introduced into the orthodox creed. This majority was
divided into two parties, distinguished by a contrary tendency to the sentiments of the Tritheists
and of the Sabellians. But as those opposite extremes seemed to overthrow the foundations
either of natural or revealed religion, they mutually agreed to qualify the rigor of their principles;
and to disavow the just, but invidious, consequences, which might be urged by their antagonists.
The interest of the common cause inclined them to join their numbers, and to conceal their
differences; their animosity was softened by the healing counsels of toleration, and their disputes
were suspended by the use of the mysterious Homoousion, which either party was free to
interpret according to their peculiar tenets. The Sabellian sense, which, about fifty years before,
had obliged the council of Antioch to prohibit this celebrated term, had endeared it to those
theologians who entertained a secret but partial affection for a nominal Trinity. But the more
fashionable saints of the Arian times, the intrepid Athanasius, the learned Gregory Nazianzen,
and the other pillars of the church, who supported with ability and success the Nicene doctrine,
appeared to consider the expression of substance as if it had been synonymous with that of
nature; and they ventured to illustrate their meaning, by affirming that three men, as they belong
to the same common species, are consubstantial, or homoousian to each other. This pure and
distinct equality was tempered, on the one hand, by the internal connection, and spiritual
penetration which indissolubly unites the divine persons; and, on the other, by the preeminence
of the Father, which was acknowledged as far as it is compatible with the independence of the
Son. Within these limits, the almost invisible and tremulous ball of orthodoxy was allowed
securely to vibrate. On either side, beyond this consecrated ground, the heretics and the dæmons
lurked in ambush to surprise and devour the unhappy wanderer. But as the degrees of theological
hatred depend on the spirit of the war, rather than on the importance of the controversy, the
heretics who degraded, were treated with more severity than those who annihilated, the person
of the Son. The life of Athanasius was consumed in irreconcilable opposition to the impious
madness of the Arians; but he defended above twenty years the Sabellianism of Marcellus of
Ancyra; and when at last he was compelled to withdraw himself from his communion, he
continued to mention, with an ambiguous smile, the venial errors of his respectable friend.
The authority of a general council, to which the Arians themselves had been compelled to
submit, inscribed on the banners of the orthodox party the mysterious characters of the word
Homoousion, which essentially contributed, notwithstanding some obscure disputes, some
nocturnal combats, to maintain and perpetuate the uniformity of faith, or at least of language.
The Consubstantialists, who by their success have deserved and obtained the title of Catholics,
gloried in the simplicity and steadiness of their own creed, and insulted the repeated variations
of their adversaries, who were destitute of any certain rule of faith. The sincerity or the cunning
of the Arian chiefs, the fear of the laws or of the people, their reverence for Christ, their hatred
of Athanasius, all the causes, human and divine, that influence and disturb the counsels of a
theological faction, introduced among the sectaries a spirit of discord and inconstancy, which, in
the course of a few years, erected eighteen different models of religion, and avenged the
violated dignity of the church. The zealous Hilary, who, from the peculiar hardships of his
situation, was inclined to extenuate rather than to aggravate the errors of the Oriental clergy,
declares, that in the wide extent of the ten provinces of Asia, to which he had been banished,
there could be found very few prelates who had preserved the knowledge of the true God. The
oppression which he had felt, the disorders of which he was the spectator and the victim,
appeased, during a short interval, the angry passions of his soul; and in the following passage, of
which I shall transcribe a few lines, the bishop of Poitiers unwarily deviates into the style of a
Christian philosopher. "It is a thing," says Hilary, "equally deplorable and dangerous, that there
are as many creeds as opinions among men, as many doctrines as inclinations, and as many
sources of blasphemy as there are faults among us; because we make creeds arbitrarily, and
explain them as arbitrarily. The Homoousion is rejected, and received, and explained away by
successive synods. The partial or total resemblance of the Father and of the Son is a subject of
dispute for these unhappy times. Every year, nay, every moon, we make new creeds to describe
invisible mysteries. We repent of what we have done, we defend those who repent, we
anathematize those whom we defended. We condemn either the doctrine of others in ourselves,
or our own in that of others; and reciprocally tearing one another to pieces, we have been the
cause of each other's ruin."
It will not be expected, it would not perhaps be endured, that I should swell this theological
digression, by a minute examination of the eighteen creeds, the authors of which, for the most
part, disclaimed the odious name of their parent Arius. It is amusing enough to delineate the
form, and to trace the vegetation, of a singular plant; but the tedious detail of leaves without
flowers, and of branches without fruit, would soon exhaust the patience, and disappoint the
curiosity, of the laborious student. One question, which gradually arose from the Arian
controversy, may, however, be noticed, as it served to produce and discriminate the three sects,
who were united only by their common aversion to the Homoousion of the Nicene synod. 1. If
they were asked whether the Son was like unto the Father, the question was resolutely answered
in the negative, by the heretics who adhered to the principles of Arius, or indeed to those of
philosophy; which seem to establish an infinite difference between the Creator and the most
excellent of his creatures. This obvious consequence was maintained by Ætius, on whom the
zeal of his adversaries bestowed the surname of the Atheist. His restless and aspiring spirit urged
him to try almost every profession of human life. He was successively a slave, or at least a
husbandman, a travelling tinker, a goldsmith, a physician, a schoolmaster, a theologian, and at
last the apostle of a new church, which was propagated by the abilities of his disciple Eunomius.
Armed with texts of Scripture, and with captious syllogisms from the logic of Aristotle, the
subtle Ætius had acquired the fame of an invincible disputant, whom it was impossible either to
silence or to convince. Such talents engaged the friendship of the Arian bishops, till they were
forced to renounce, and even to persecute, a dangerous ally, who, by the accuracy of his
reasoning, had prejudiced their cause in the popular opinion, and offended the piety of their most
devoted followers. 2. The omnipotence of the Creator suggested a specious and respectful
solution of the likeness of the Father and the Son; and faith might humbly receive what reason
could not presume to deny, that the Supreme God might communicate his infinite perfections,
and create a being similar only to himself. These Arians were powerfully supported by the
weight and abilities of their leaders, who had succeeded to the management of the Eusebian
interest, and who occupied the principal thrones of the East. They detested, perhaps with some
affectation, the impiety of Ætius; they professed to believe, either without reserve, or according
to the Scriptures, that the Son was different from all other creatures, and similar only to the
Father. But they denied, the he was either of the same, or of a similar substance; sometimes
boldly justifying their dissent, and sometimes objecting to the use of the word substance, which
seems to imply an adequate, or at least, a distinct, notion of the nature of the Deity. 3. The sect
which deserted the doctrine of a similar substance, was the most numerous, at least in the
provinces of Asia; and when the leaders of both parties were assembled in the council of
Seleucia, their opinion would have prevailed by a majority of one hundred and five to
forty-three bishops. The Greek word, which was chosen to express this mysterious resemblance,
bears so close an affinity to the orthodox symbol, that the profane of every age have derided the
furious contests which the difference of a single diphthong excited between the Homoousians
and the Homoiousians. As it frequently happens, that the sounds and characters which approach
the nearest to each other accidentally represent the most opposite ideas, the observation would
be itself ridiculous, if it were possible to mark any real and sensible distinction between the
doctrine of the Semi-Arians, as they were improperly styled, and that of the Catholics
themselves. The bishop of Poitiers, who in his Phrygian exile very wisely aimed at a coalition of
parties, endeavors to prove that by a pious and faithful interpretation, the Homoiousion may be
reduced to a consubstantial sense. Yet he confesses that the word has a dark and suspicious
aspect; and, as if darkness were congenial to theological disputes, the Semi-Arians, who
advanced to the doors of the church, assailed them with the most unrelenting fury.
The provinces of Egypt and Asia, which cultivated the language and manners of the Greeks, had
deeply imbibed the venom of the Arian controversy. The familiar study of the Platonic system, a
vain and argumentative disposition, a copious and flexible idiom, supplied the clergy and people
of the East with an inexhaustible flow of words and distinctions; and, in the midst of their fierce
contentions, they easily forgot the doubt which is recommended by philosophy, and the
submission which is enjoined by religion. The inhabitants of the West were of a less inquisitive
spirit; their passions were not so forcibly moved by invisible objects, their minds were less
frequently exercised by the habits of dispute; and such was the happy ignorance of the Gallican
church, that Hilary himself, above thirty years after the first general council, was still a stranger
to the Nicene creed. The Latins had received the rays of divine knowledge through the dark and
doubtful medium of a translation. The poverty and stubbornness of their native tongue was not
always capable of affording just equivalents for the Greek terms, for the technical words of the
Platonic philosophy, which had been consecrated, by the gospel or by the church, to express the
mysteries of the Christian faith; and a verbal defect might introduce into the Latin theology a
long train of error or perplexity. But as the western provincials had the good fortune of deriving
their religion from an orthodox source, they preserved with steadiness the doctrine which they
had accepted with docility; and when the Arian pestilence approached their frontiers, they were
supplied with the seasonable preservative of the Homoousion, by the paternal care of the Roman
pontiff. Their sentiments and their temper were displayed in the memorable synod of Rimini,
which surpassed in numbers the council of Nice, since it was composed of above four hundred
bishops of Italy, Africa, Spain, Gaul, Britain, and Illyricum. From the first debates it appeared,
that only fourscore prelates adhered to the party, though they affected to anathematize the name
and memory, of Arius. But this inferiority was compensated by the advantages of skill, of
experience, and of discipline; and the minority was conducted by Valens and Ursacius, two
bishops of Illyricum, who had spent their lives in the intrigues of courts and councils, and who
had been trained under the Eusebian banner in the religious wars of the East. By their arguments
and negotiations, they embarrassed, they confounded, they at last deceived, the honest simplicity
of the Latin bishops; who suffered the palladium of the faith to be extorted from their hand by
fraud and importunity, rather than by open violence. The council of Rimini was not allowed to
separate, till the members had imprudently subscribed a captious creed, in which some
expressions, susceptible of an heretical sense, were inserted in the room of the Homoousion. It
was on this occasion, that, according to Jerom, the world was surprised to find itself Arian. But
the bishops of the Latin provinces had no sooner reached their respective dioceses, than they
discovered their mistake, and repented of their weakness. The ignominious capitulation was
rejected with disdain and abhorrence; and the Homoousian standard, which had been shaken but
not overthrown, was more firmly replanted in all the churches of the West.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church. -- Part IV.
Such was the rise and progress, and such were the natural revolutions of those theological
disputes, which disturbed the peace of Christianity under the reigns of Constantine and of his
sons. But as those princes presumed to extend their despotism over the faith, as well as over the
lives and fortunes, of their subjects, the weight of their suffrage sometimes inclined the
ecclesiastical balance: and the prerogatives of the King of Heaven were settled, or changed, or
modified, in the cabinet of an earthly monarch.
The unhappy spirit of discord which pervaded the provinces of the East, interrupted the triumph
of Constantine; but the emperor continued for some time to view, with cool and careless
indifference, the object of the dispute. As he was yet ignorant of the difficulty of appeasing the
quarrels of theologians, he addressed to the contending parties, to Alexander and to Arius, a
moderating epistle; which may be ascribed, with far greater reason, to the untutored sense of a
soldier and statesman, than to the dictates of any of his episcopal counsellors. He attributes the
origin of the whole controversy to a trifling and subtle question, concerning an incomprehensible
point of law, which was foolishly asked by the bishop, and imprudently resolved by the
presbyter. He laments that the Christian people, who had the same God, the same religion, and
the same worship, should be divided by such inconsiderable distinctions; and he seriously
recommend to the clergy of Alexandria the example of the Greek philosophers; who could
maintain their arguments without losing their temper, and assert their freedom without violating
their friendship. The indifference and contempt of the sovereign would have been, perhaps, the
most effectual method of silencing the dispute, if the popular current had been less rapid and
impetuous, and if Constantine himself, in the midst of faction and fanaticism, could have
preserved the calm possession of his own mind. But his ecclesiastical ministers soon contrived
to seduce the impartiality of the magistrate, and to awaken the zeal of the proselyte. He was
provoked by the insults which had been offered to his statues; he was alarmed by the real, as
well as the imaginary magnitude of the spreading mischief; and he extinguished the hope of
peace and toleration, from the moment that he assembled three hundred bishops within the walls
of the same palace. The presence of the monarch swelled the importance of the debate; his
attention multiplied the arguments; and he exposed his person with a patient intrepidity, which
animated the valor of the combatants. Notwithstanding the applause which has been bestowed
on the eloquence and sagacity of Constantine, a Roman general, whose religion might be still a
subject of doubt, and whose mind had not been enlightened either by study or by inspiration, was
indifferently qualified to discuss, in the Greek language, a metaphysical question, or an article of
faith. But the credit of his favorite Osius, who appears to have presided in the council of Nice,
might dispose the emperor in favor of the orthodox party; and a well-timed insinuation, that the
same Eusebius of Nicomedia, who now protected the heretic, had lately assisted the tyrant,
might exasperate him against their adversaries. The Nicene creed was ratified by Constantine;
and his firm declaration, that those who resisted the divine judgment of the synod, must prepare
themselves for an immediate exile, annihilated the murmurs of a feeble opposition; which, from
seventeen, was almost instantly reduced to two, protesting bishops. Eusebius of Cæsarea yielded
a reluctant and ambiguous consent to the Homoousion; and the wavering conduct of the
Nicomedian Eusebius served only to delay, about three months, his disgrace and exile. The
impious Arius was banished into one of the remote provinces of Illyricum; his person and
disciples were branded by law with the odious name of Porphyrians; his writings were
condemned to the flames, and a capital punishment was denounced against those in whose
possession they should be found. The emperor had now imbibed the spirit of controversy, and
the angry, sarcastic style of his edicts was designed to inspire his subjects with the hatred which
he had conceived against the enemies of Christ.
But, as if the conduct of the emperor had been guided by passion instead of principle, three years
from the council of Nice were scarcely elapsed before he discovered some symptoms of mercy,
and even of indulgence, towards the proscribed sect, which was secretly protected by his favorite
sister. The exiles were recalled, and Eusebius, who gradually resumed his influence over the
mind of Constantine, was restored to the episcopal throne, from which he had been
ignominiously degraded. Arius himself was treated by the whole court with the respect which
would have been due to an innocent and oppressed man. His faith was approved by the synod of
Jerusalem; and the emperor seemed impatient to repair his injustice, by issuing an absolute
command, that he should be solemnly admitted to the communion in the cathedral of
Constantinople. On the same day, which had been fixed for the triumph of Arius, he expired; and
the strange and horrid circumstances of his death might excite a suspicion, that the orthodox
saints had contributed more efficaciously than by their prayers, to deliver the church from the
most formidable of her enemies. The three principal leaders of the Catholics, Athanasius of
Alexandria, Eustathius of Antioch, and Paul of Constantinople were deposed on various f
accusations, by the sentence of numerous councils; and were afterwards banished into distant
provinces by the first of the Christian emperors, who, in the last moments of his life, received
the rites of baptism from the Arian bishop of Nicomedia. The ecclesiastical government of
Constantine cannot be justified from the reproach of levity and weakness. But the credulous
monarch, unskilled in the stratagems of theological warfare, might be deceived by the modest
and specious professions of the heretics, whose sentiments he never perfectly understood; and
while he protected Arius, and persecuted Athanasius, he still considered the council of Nice as
the bulwark of the Christian faith, and the peculiar glory of his own reign.
The sons of Constantine must have been admitted from their childhood into the rank of
catechumens; but they imitated, in the delay of their baptism, the example of their father. Like
him they presumed to pronounce their judgment on mysteries into which they had never been
regularly initiated; and the fate of the Trinitarian controversy depended, in a great measure, on
the sentiments of Constantius; who inherited the provinces of the East, and acquired the
possession of the whole empire. The Arian presbyter or bishop, who had secreted for his use the
testament of the deceased emperor, improved the fortunate occasion which had introduced him
to the familiarity of a prince, whose public counsels were always swayed by his domestic
favorites. The eunuchs and slaves diffused the spiritual poison through the palace, and the
dangerous infection was communicated by the female attendants to the guards, and by the
empress to her unsuspicious husband. The partiality which Constantius always expressed
towards the Eusebian faction, was insensibly fortified by the dexterous management of their
leaders; and his victory over the tyrant Magnentius increased his inclination, as well as ability, to
employ the arms of power in the cause of Arianism. While the two armies were engaged in the
plains of Mursa, and the fate of the two rivals depended on the chance of war, the son of
Constantine passed the anxious moments in a church of the martyrs under the walls of the city.
His spiritual comforter, Valens, the Arian bishop of the diocese, employed the most artful
precautions to obtain such early intelligence as might secure either his favor or his escape. A
secret chain of swift and trusty messengers informed him of the vicissitudes of the battle; and
while the courtiers stood trembling round their affrighted master, Valens assured him that the
Gallic legions gave way; and insinuated with some presence of mind, that the glorious event had
been revealed to him by an angel. The grateful emperor ascribed his success to the merits and
intercession of the bishop of Mursa, whose faith had deserved the public and miraculous
approbation of Heaven. The Arians, who considered as their own the victory of Constantius,
preferred his glory to that of his father. Cyril, bishop of Jerusalem, immediately composed the
description of a celestial cross, encircled with a splendid rainbow; which during the festival of
Pentecost, about the third hour of the day, had appeared over the Mount of Olives, to the
edification of the devout pilgrims, and the people of the holy city. The size of the meteor was
gradually magnified; and the Arian historian has ventured to affirm, that it was conspicuous to
the two armies in the plains of Pannonia; and that the tyrant, who is purposely represented as an
idolater, fled before the auspicious sign of orthodox Christianity.
The sentiments of a judicious stranger, who has impartially considered the progress of civil or
ecclesiastical discord, are always entitled to our notice; and a short passage of Ammianus, who
served in the armies, and studied the character of Constantius, is perhaps of more value than
many pages of theological invectives. "The Christian religion, which, in itself," says that
moderate historian, "is plain and simple, he confounded by the dotage of superstition. Instead of
reconciling the parties by the weight of his authority, he cherished and promulgated, by verbal
disputes, the differences which his vain curiosity had excited. The highways were covered with
troops of bishops galloping from every side to the assemblies, which they call synods; and while
they labored to reduce the whole sect to their own particular opinions, the public establishment
of the posts was almost ruined by their hasty and repeated journeys." Our more intimate
knowledge of the ecclesiastical transactions of the reign of Constantius would furnish an ample
commentary on this remarkable passage, which justifies the rational apprehensions of
Athanasius, that the restless activity of the clergy, who wandered round the empire in search of
the true faith, would excite the contempt and laughter of the unbelieving world. As soon as the
emperor was relieved from the terrors of the civil war, he devoted the leisure of his winter
quarters at Arles, Milan, Sirmium, and Constantinople, to the amusement or toils of controversy:
the sword of the magistrate, and even of the tyrant, was unsheathed, to enforce the reasons of the
theologian; and as he opposed the orthodox faith of Nice, it is readily confessed that his
incapacity and ignorance were equal to his presumption. The eunuchs, the women, and the
bishops, who governed the vain and feeble mind of the emperor, had inspired him with an
insuperable dislike to the Homoousion; but his timid conscience was alarmed by the impiety of
Ætius. The guilt of that atheist was aggravated by the suspicious favor of the unfortunate Gallus;
and even the death of the Imperial ministers, who had been massacred at Antioch, were imputed
to the suggestions of that dangerous sophist. The mind of Constantius, which could neither be
moderated by reason, nor fixed by faith, was blindly impelled to either side of the dark and
empty abyss, by his horror of the opposite extreme; he alternately embraced and condemned the
sentiments, he successively banished and recalled the leaders, of the Arian and Semi-Arian
factions. During the season of public business or festivity, he employed whole days, and even
nights, in selecting the words, and weighing the syllables, which composed his fluctuating
creeds. The subject of his meditations still pursued and occupied his slumbers: the incoherent
dreams of the emperor were received as celestial visions, and he accepted with complacency the
lofty title of bishop of bishops, from those ecclesiastics who forgot the interest of their order for
the gratification of their passions. The design of establishing a uniformity of doctrine, which had
engaged him to convene so many synods in Gaul, Italy, Illyricum, and Asia, was repeatedly
baffled by his own levity, by the divisions of the Arians, and by the resistance of the Catholics;
and he resolved, as the last and decisive effort, imperiously to dictate the decrees of a general
council. The destructive earthquake of Nicomedia, the difficulty of finding a convenient place,
and perhaps some secret motives of policy, produced an alteration in the summons. The bishops
of the East were directed to meet at Seleucia, in Isauria; while those of the West held their
deliberations at Rimini, on the coast of the Hadriatic; and instead of two or three deputies from
each province, the whole episcopal body was ordered to march. The Eastern council, after
consuming four days in fierce and unavailing debate, separated without any definitive
conclusion. The council of the West was protracted till the seventh month. Taurus, the Prætorian
præfect was instructed not to dismiss the prelates till they should all be united in the same
opinion; and his efforts were supported by the power of banishing fifteen of the most refractory,
and a promise of the consulship if he achieved so difficult an adventure. His prayers and threats,
the authority of the sovereign, the sophistry of Valens and Ursacius, the distress of cold and
hunger, and the tedious melancholy of a hopeless exile, at length extorted the reluctant consent
of the bishops of Rimini. The deputies of the East and of the West attended the emperor in the
palace of Constantinople, and he enjoyed the satisfaction of imposing on the world a profession
of faith which established the likeness, without expressing the consubstantiality, of the Son of
God. But the triumph of Arianism had been preceded by the removal of the orthodox clergy,
whom it was impossible either to intimidate or to corrupt; and the reign of Constantius was
disgraced by the unjust and ineffectual persecution of the great Athanasius.
We have seldom an opportunity of observing, either in active or speculative life, what effect may
be produced, or what obstacles may be surmounted, by the force of a single mind, when it is
inflexibly applied to the pursuit of a single object. The immortal name of Athanasius will never
be separated from the Catholic doctrine of the Trinity, to whose defence he consecrated every
moment and every faculty of his being. Educated in the family of Alexander, he had vigorously
opposed the early progress of the Arian heresy: he exercised the important functions of secretary
under the aged prelate; and the fathers of the Nicene council beheld with surprise and respect the
rising virtues of the young deacon. In a time of public danger, the dull claims of age and of rank
are sometimes superseded; and within five months after his return from Nice, the deacon
Athanasius was seated on the archiepiscopal throne of Egypt. He filled that eminent station
above forty-six years, and his long administration was spent in a perpetual combat against the
powers of Arianism. Five times was Athanasius expelled from his throne; twenty years he passed
as an exile or a fugitive: and almost every province of the Roman empire was successively
witness to his merit, and his sufferings in the cause of the Homoousion, which he considered as
the sole pleasure and business, as the duty, and as the glory of his life. Amidst the storms of
persecution, the archbishop of Alexandria was patient of labor, jealous of fame, careless of
safety; and although his mind was tainted by the contagion of fanaticism, Athanasius displayed a
superiority of character and abilities, which would have qualified him, far better than the
degenerate sons of Constantine, for the government of a great monarchy. His learning was much
less profound and extensive than that of Eusebius of Cæsarea, and his rude eloquence could not
be compared with the polished oratory of Gregory of Basil; but whenever the primate of Egypt
was called upon to justify his sentiments, or his conduct, his unpremeditated style, either of
speaking or writing, was clear, forcible, and persuasive. He has always been revered, in the
orthodox school, as one of the most accurate masters of the Christian theology; and he was
supposed to possess two profane sciences, less adapted to the episcopal character, the knowledge
of jurisprudence, and that of divination. Some fortunate conjectures of future events, which
impartial reasoners might ascribe to the experience and judgment of Athanasius, were attributed
by his friends to heavenly inspiration, and imputed by his enemies to infernal magic.
But as Athanasius was continually engaged with the prejudices and passions of every order of
men, from the monk to the emperor, the knowledge of human nature was his first and most
important science. He preserved a distinct and unbroken view of a scene which was incessantly
shifting; and never failed to improve those decisive moments which are irrecoverably past before
they are perceived by a common eye. The archbishop of Alexandria was capable of
distinguishing how far he might boldly command, and where he must dexterously insinuate; how
long he might contend with power, and when he must withdraw from persecution; and while he
directed the thunders of the church against heresy and rebellion, he could assume, in the bosom
of his own party, the flexible and indulgent temper of a prudent leader. The election of
Athanasius has not escaped the reproach of irregularity and precipitation; but the propriety of
his behavior conciliated the affections both of the clergy and of the people. The Alexandrians
were impatient to rise in arms for the defence of an eloquent and liberal pastor. In his distress he
always derived support, or at least consolation, from the faithful attachment of his parochial
clergy; and the hundred bishops of Egypt adhered, with unshaken zeal, to the cause of
Athanasius. In the modest equipage which pride and policy would affect, he frequently
performed the episcopal visitation of his provinces, from the mouth of the Nile to the confines of
Æthiopia; familiarly conversing with the meanest of the populace, and humbly saluting the
saints and hermits of the desert. Nor was it only in ecclesiastical assemblies, among men whose
education and manners were similar to his own, that Athanasius displayed the ascendancy of his
genius. He appeared with easy and respectful firmness in the courts of princes; and in the various
turns of his prosperous and adverse fortune he never lost the confidence of his friends, or the
esteem of his enemies.
In his youth, the primate of Egypt resisted the great Constantine, who had repeatedly signified
his will, that Arius should be restored to the Catholic communion. The emperor respected, and
might forgive, this inflexible resolution; and the faction who considered Athanasius as their most
formidable enemy, was constrained to dissemble their hatred, and silently to prepare an indirect
and distant assault. They scattered rumors and suspicions, represented the archbishop as a proud
and oppressive tyrant, and boldly accused him of violating the treaty which had been ratified in
the Nicene council, with the schismatic followers of Meletius. Athanasius had openly
disapproved that ignominious peace, and the emperor was disposed to believe that he had abused
his ecclesiastical and civil power, to prosecute those odious sectaries: that he had sacrilegiously
broken a chalice in one of their churches of Mareotis; that he had whipped or imprisoned six of
their bishops; and that Arsenius, a seventh bishop of the same party, had been murdered, or at
least mutilated, by the cruel hand of the primate. These charges, which affected his honor and
his life, were referred by Constantine to his brother Dalmatius the censor, who resided at
Antioch; the synods of Cæsarea and Tyre were successively convened; and the bishops of the
East were instructed to judge the cause of Athanasius, before they proceeded to consecrate the
new church of the Resurrection at Jerusalem. The primate might be conscious of his innocence;
but he was sensible that the same implacable spirit which had dictated the accusation, would
direct the proceeding, and pronounce the sentence. He prudently declined the tribunal of his
enemies; despised the summons of the synod of Cæsarea; and, after a long and artful delay,
submitted to the peremptory commands of the emperor, who threatened to punish his criminal
disobedience if he refused to appear in the council of Tyre. Before Athanasius, at the head of
fifty Egyptian prelates, sailed from Alexandria, he had wisely secured the alliance of the
Meletians; and Arsenius himself, his imaginary victim, and his secret friend, was privately
concealed in his train. The synod of Tyre was conducted by Eusebius of Cæsarea, with more
passion, and with less art, than his learning and experience might promise; his numerous faction
repeated the names of homicide and tyrant; and their clamors were encouraged by the seeming
patience of Athanasius, who expected the decisive moment to produce Arsenius alive and unhurt
in the midst of the assembly. The nature of the other charges did not admit of such clear and
satisfactory replies; yet the archbishop was able to prove, that in the village, where he was
accused of breaking a consecrated chalice, neither church nor altar nor chalice could really exist.
The Arians, who had secretly determined the guilt and condemnation of their enemy, attempted,
however, to disguise their injustice by the imitation of judicial forms: the synod appointed an
episcopal commission of six delegates to collect evidence on the spot; and this measure which
was vigorously opposed by the Egyptian bishops, opened new scenes of violence and perjury.
After the return of the deputies from Alexandria, the majority of the council pronounced the
final sentence of degradation and exile against the primate of Egypt. The decree, expressed in
the fiercest language of malice and revenge, was communicated to the emperor and the Catholic
church; and the bishops immediately resumed a mild and devout aspect, such as became their
holy pilgrimage to the Sepulchre of Christ.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church. -- Part V.
But the injustice of these ecclesiastical judges had not been countenanced by the submission, or
even by the presence, of Athanasius. He resolved to make a bold and dangerous experiment,
whether the throne was inaccessible to the voice of truth; and before the final sentence could be
pronounced at Tyre, the intrepid primate threw himself into a bark which was ready to hoist sail
for the Imperial city. The request of a formal audience might have been opposed or eluded; but
Athanasius concealed his arrival, watched the moment of Constantine's return from an adjacent
villa, and boldly encountered his angry sovereign as he passed on horseback through the
principal street of Constantinople. So strange an apparition excited his surprise and indignation;
and the guards were ordered to remove the importunate suitor; but his resentment was subdued
by involuntary respect; and the haughty spirit of the emperor was awed by the courage and
eloquence of a bishop, who implored his justice and awakened his conscience. Constantine
listened to the complaints of Athanasius with impartial and even gracious attention; the
members of the synod of Tyre were summoned to justify their proceedings; and the arts of the
Eusebian faction would have been confounded, if they had not aggravated the guilt of the
primate, by the dexterous supposition of an unpardonable offence; a criminal design to intercept
and detain the corn-fleet of Alexandria, which supplied the subsistence of the new capital. The
emperor was satisfied that the peace of Egypt would be secured by the absence of a popular
leader; but he refused to fill the vacancy of the archiepiscopal throne; and the sentence, which,
after long hesitation, he pronounced, was that of a jealous ostracism, rather than of an
ignominious exile. In the remote province of Gaul, but in the hospitable court of Treves,
Athanasius passed about twenty eight months. The death of the emperor changed the face of
public affairs and, amidst the general indulgence of a young reign, the primate was restored to
his country by an honorable edict of the younger Constantine, who expressed a deep sense of the
innocence and merit of his venerable guest.
The death of that prince exposed Athanasius to a second persecution; and the feeble Constantius,
the sovereign of the East, soon became the secret accomplice of the Eusebians. Ninety bishops
of that sect or faction assembled at Antioch, under the specious pretence of dedicating the
cathedral. They composed an ambiguous creed, which is faintly tinged with the colors of
Semi-Arianism, and twenty-five canons, which still regulate the discipline of the orthodox
Greeks. It was decided, with some appearance of equity, that a bishop, deprived by a synod,
should not resume his episcopal functions till he had been absolved by the judgment of an equal
synod; the law was immediately applied to the case of Athanasius; the council of Antioch
pronounced, or rather confirmed, his degradation: a stranger, named Gregory, was seated on his
throne; and Philagrius, the præfect of Egypt, was instructed to support the new primate with the
civil and military powers of the province. Oppressed by the conspiracy of the Asiatic prelates,
Athanasius withdrew from Alexandria, and passed three years as an exile and a suppliant on the
holy threshold of the Vatican. By the assiduous study of the Latin language, he soon qualified
himself to negotiate with the western clergy; his decent flattery swayed and directed the haughty
Julius; the Roman pontiff was persuaded to consider his appeal as the peculiar interest of the
Apostolic see: and his innocence was unanimously declared in a council of fifty bishops of Italy.
At the end of three years, the primate was summoned to the court of Milan by the emperor
Constans, who, in the indulgence of unlawful pleasures, still professed a lively regard for the
orthodox faith. The cause of truth and justice was promoted by the influence of gold, and the
ministers of Constans advised their sovereign to require the convocation of an ecclesiastical
assembly, which might act as the representatives of the Catholic church. Ninety-four bishops of
the West, seventy-six bishops of the East, encountered each other at Sardica, on the verge of the
two empires, but in the dominions of the protector of Athanasius. Their debates soon
degenerated into hostile altercations; the Asiatics, apprehensive for their personal safety, retired
to Philippopolis in Thrace; and the rival synods reciprocally hurled their spiritual thunders
against their enemies, whom they piously condemned as the enemies of the true God. Their
decrees were published and ratified in their respective provinces: and Athanasius, who in the
West was revered as a saint, was exposed as a criminal to the abhorrence of the East. The
council of Sardica reveals the first symptoms of discord and schism between the Greek and Latin
churches which were separated by the accidental difference of faith, and the permanent
distinction of language.
During his second exile in the West, Athanasius was frequently admitted to the Imperial
presence; at Capua, Lodi, Milan, Verona, Padua, Aquileia, and Treves. The bishop of the diocese
usually assisted at these interviews; the master of the offices stood before the veil or curtain of
the sacred apartment; and the uniform moderation of the primate might be attested by these
respectable witnesses, to whose evidence he solemnly appeals. Prudence would undoubtedly
suggest the mild and respectful tone that became a subject and a bishop. In these familiar
conferences with the sovereign of the West, Athanasius might lament the error of Constantius,
but he boldly arraigned the guilt of his eunuchs and his Arian prelates; deplored the distress and
danger of the Catholic church; and excited Constans to emulate the zeal and glory of his father.
The emperor declared his resolution of employing the troops and treasures of Europe in the
orthodox cause; and signified, by a concise and peremptory epistle to his brother Constantius,
that unless he consented to the immediate restoration of Athanasius, he himself, with a fleet and
army, would seat the archbishop on the throne of Alexandria. But this religious war, so horrible
to nature, was prevented by the timely compliance of Constantius; and the emperor of the East
condescended to solicit a reconciliation with a subject whom he had injured. Athanasius waited
with decent pride, till he had received three successive epistles full of the strongest assurances of
the protection, the favor, and the esteem of his sovereign; who invited him to resume his
episcopal seat, and who added the humiliating precaution of engaging his principal ministers to
attest the sincerity of his intentions. They were manifested in a still more public manner, by the
strict orders which were despatched into Egypt to recall the adherents of Athanasius, to restore
their privileges, to proclaim their innocence, and to erase from the public registers the illegal
proceedings which had been obtained during the prevalence of the Eusebian faction. After every
satisfaction and security had been given, which justice or even delicacy could require, the
primate proceeded, by slow journeys, through the provinces of Thrace, Asia, and Syria; and his
progress was marked by the abject homage of the Oriental bishops, who excited his contempt
without deceiving his penetration. At Antioch he saw the emperor Constantius; sustained, with
modest firmness, the embraces and protestations of his master, and eluded the proposal of
allowing the Arians a single church at Alexandria, by claiming, in the other cities of the empire,
a similar toleration for his own party; a reply which might have appeared just and moderate in
the mouth of an independent prince. The entrance of the archbishop into his capital was a
triumphal procession; absence and persecution had endeared him to the Alexandrians; his
authority, which he exercised with rigor, was more firmly established; and his fame was diffused
from Æthiopia to Britain, over the whole extent of the Christian world.
But the subject who has reduced his prince to the necessity of dissembling, can never expect a
sincere and lasting forgiveness; and the tragic fate of Constans soon deprived Athanasius of a
powerful and generous protector. The civil war between the assassin and the only surviving
brother of Constans, which afflicted the empire above three years, secured an interval of repose
to the Catholic church; and the two contending parties were desirous to conciliate the friendship
of a bishop, who, by the weight of his personal authority, might determine the fluctuating
resolutions of an important province. He gave audience to the ambassadors of the tyrant, with
whom he was afterwards accused of holding a secret correspondence; and the emperor
Constantius repeatedly assured his dearest father, the most reverend Athanasius, that,
notwithstanding the malicious rumors which were circulated by their common enemies, he had
inherited the sentiments, as well as the throne, of his deceased brother. Gratitude and humanity
would have disposed the primate of Egypt to deplore the untimely fate of Constans, and to abhor
the guilt of Magnentius; but as he clearly understood that the apprehensions of Constantius were
his only safeguard, the fervor of his prayers for the success of the righteous cause might perhaps
be somewhat abated. The ruin of Athanasius was no longer contrived by the obscure malice of a
few bigoted or angry bishops, who abused the authority of a credulous monarch. The monarch
himself avowed the resolution, which he had so long suppressed, of avenging his private
injuries; and the first winter after his victory, which he passed at Arles, was employed against
an enemy more odious to him than the vanquished tyrant of Gaul.
If the emperor had capriciously decreed the death of the most eminent and virtuous citizen of the
republic, the cruel order would have been executed without hesitation, by the ministers of open
violence or of specious injustice. The caution, the delay, the difficulty with which he proceeded
in the condemnation and punishment of a popular bishop, discovered to the world that the
privileges of the church had already revived a sense of order and freedom in the Roman
government. The sentence which was pronounced in the synod of Tyre, and subscribed by a
large majority of the Eastern bishops, had never been expressly repealed; and as Athanasius had
been once degraded from his episcopal dignity by the judgment of his brethren, every subsequent
act might be considered as irregular, and even criminal. But the memory of the firm and
effectual support which the primate of Egypt had derived from the attachment of the Western
church, engaged Constantius to suspend the execution of the sentence till he had obtained the
concurrence of the Latin bishops. Two years were consumed in ecclesiastical negotiations; and
the important cause between the emperor and one of his subjects was solemnly debated, first in
the synod of Arles, and afterwards in the great council of Milan, which consisted of above three
hundred bishops. Their integrity was gradually undermined by the arguments of the Arians, the
dexterity of the eunuchs, and the pressing solicitations of a prince who gratified his revenge at
the expense of his dignity, and exposed his own passions, whilst he influenced those of the
clergy. Corruption, the most infallible symptom of constitutional liberty, was successfully
practised; honors, gifts, and immunities were offered and accepted as the price of an episcopal
vote; and the condemnation of the Alexandrian primate was artfully represented as the only
measure which could restore the peace and union of the Catholic church. The friends of
Athanasius were not, however, wanting to their leader, or to their cause. With a manly spirit,
which the sanctity of their character rendered less dangerous, they maintained, in public debate,
and in private conference with the emperor, the eternal obligation of religion and justice. They
declared, that neither the hope of his favor, nor the fear of his displeasure, should prevail on
them to join in the condemnation of an absent, an innocent, a respectable brother. They
affirmed, with apparent reason, that the illegal and obsolete decrees of the council of Tyre had
long since been tacitly abolished by the Imperial edicts, the honorable reestablishment of the
archbishop of Alexandria, and the silence or recantation of his most clamorous adversaries. They
alleged, that his innocence had been attested by the unanimous bishops of Egypt, and had been
acknowledged in the councils of Rome and Sardica, by the impartial judgment of the Latin
church. They deplored the hard condition of Athanasius, who, after enjoying so many years his
seat, his reputation, and the seeming confidence of his sovereign, was again called upon to
confute the most groundless and extravagant accusations. Their language was specious; their
conduct was honorable: but in this long and obstinate contest, which fixed the eyes of the whole
empire on a single bishop, the ecclesiastical factions were prepared to sacrifice truth and justice
to the more interesting object of defending or removing the intrepid champion of the Nicene
faith. The Arians still thought it prudent to disguise, in ambiguous language, their real
sentiments and designs; but the orthodox bishops, armed with the favor of the people, and the
decrees of a general council, insisted on every occasion, and particularly at Milan, that their
adversaries should purge themselves from the suspicion of heresy, before they presumed to
arraign the conduct of the great Athanasius.
But the voice of reason (if reason was indeed on the side of Athanasius) was silenced by the
clamors of a factious or venal majority; and the councils of Arles and Milan were not dissolved,
till the archbishop of Alexandria had been solemnly condemned and deposed by the judgment of
the Western, as well as of the Eastern, church. The bishops who had opposed, were required to
subscribe, the sentence, and to unite in religious communion with the suspected leaders of the
adverse party. A formulary of consent was transmitted by the messengers of state to the absent
bishops: and all those who refused to submit their private opinion to the public and inspired
wisdom of the councils of Arles and Milan, were immediately banished by the emperor, who
affected to execute the decrees of the Catholic church. Among those prelates who led the
honorable band of confessors and exiles, Liberius of Rome, Osius of Cordova, Paulinus of
Treves, Dionysius of Milan, Eusebius of Vercellæ, Lucifer of Cagliari and Hilary of Poitiers,
may deserve to be particularly distinguished. The eminent station of Liberius, who governed the
capital of the empire; the personal merit and long experience of the venerable Osius, who was
revered as the favorite of the great Constantine, and the father of the Nicene faith, placed those
prelates at the head of the Latin church: and their example, either of submission or resistance,
would probable be imitated by the episcopal crowd. But the repeated attempts of the emperor to
seduce or to intimidate the bishops of Rome and Cordova, were for some time ineffectual. The
Spaniard declared himself ready to suffer under Constantius, as he had suffered threescore years
before under his grandfather Maximian. The Roman, in the presence of his sovereign, asserted
the innocence of Athanasius and his own freedom. When he was banished to Beræa in Thrace,
he sent back a large sum which had been offered for the accommodation of his journey; and
insulted the court of Milan by the haughty remark, that the emperor and his eunuchs might want
that gold to pay their soldiers and their bishops. The resolution of Liberius and Osius was at
length subdued by the hardships of exile and confinement. The Roman pontiff purchased his
return by some criminal compliances; and afterwards expiated his guilt by a seasonable
repentance. Persuasion and violence were employed to extort the reluctant signature of the
decrepit bishop of Cordova, whose strength was broken, and whose faculties were perhaps
impaired by the weight of a hundred years; and the insolent triumph of the Arians provoked
some of the orthodox party to treat with inhuman severity the character, or rather the memory, of
an unfortunate old man, to whose former services Christianity itself was so deeply indebted.
The fall of Liberius and Osius reflected a brighter lustre on the firmness of those bishops who
still adhered, with unshaken fidelity, to the cause of Athanasius and religious truth. The
ingenious malice of their enemies had deprived them of the benefit of mutual comfort and
advice, separated those illustrious exiles into distant provinces, and carefully selected the most
inhospitable spots of a great empire. Yet they soon experienced that the deserts of Libya, and
the most barbarous tracts of Cappadocia, were less inhospitable than the residence of those cities
in which an Arian bishop could satiate, without restraint, the exquisite rancor of theological
hatred. Their consolation was derived from the consciousness of rectitude and independence,
from the applause, the visits, the letters, and the liberal alms of their adherents, and from the
satisfaction which they soon enjoyed of observing the intestine divisions of the adversaries of the
Nicene faith. Such was the nice and capricious taste of the emperor Constantius; and so easily
was he offended by the slightest deviation from his imaginary standard of Christian truth, that he
persecuted, with equal zeal, those who defended the consubstantiality, those who asserted the
similar substance, and those who denied the likeness of the Son of God. Three bishops,
degraded and banished for those adverse opinions, might possibly meet in the same place of
exile; and, according to the difference of their temper, might either pity or insult the blind
enthusiasm of their antagonists, whose present sufferings would never be compensated by future
happiness.
The disgrace and exile of the orthodox bishops of the West were designed as so many
preparatory steps to the ruin of Athanasius himself. Six-and-twenty months had elapsed, during
which the Imperial court secretly labored, by the most insidious arts, to remove him from
Alexandria, and to withdraw the allowance which supplied his popular liberality. But when the
primate of Egypt, deserted and proscribed by the Latin church, was left destitute of any foreign
support, Constantius despatched two of his secretaries with a verbal commission to announce
and execute the order of his banishment. As the justice of the sentence was publicly avowed by
the whole party, the only motive which could restrain Constantius from giving his messengers
the sanction of a written mandate, must be imputed to his doubt of the event; and to a sense of
the danger to which he might expose the second city, and the most fertile province, of the
empire, if the people should persist in the resolution of defending, by force of arms, the
innocence of their spiritual father. Such extreme caution afforded Athanasius a specious
pretence respectfully to dispute the truth of an order, which he could not reconcile, either with
the equity, or with the former declarations, of his gracious master. The civil powers of Egypt
found themselves inadequate to the task of persuading or compelling the primate to abdicate his
episcopal throne; and they were obliged to conclude a treaty with the popular leaders of
Alexandria, by which it was stipulated, that all proceedings and all hostilities should be
suspended till the emperor's pleasure had been more distinctly ascertained. By this seeming
moderation, the Catholics were deceived into a false and fatal security; while the legions of the
Upper Egypt, and of Libya, advanced, by secret orders and hasty marches, to besiege, or rather to
surprise, a capital habituated to sedition, and inflamed by religious zeal. The position of
Alexandria, between the sea and the Lake Mareotis, facilitated the approach and landing of the
troops; who were introduced into the heart of the city, before any effectual measures could be
taken either to shut the gates or to occupy the important posts of defence. At the hour of
midnight, twenty-three days after the signature of the treaty, Syrianus, duke of Egypt, at the head
of five thousand soldiers, armed and prepared for an assault, unexpectedly invested the church of
St. Theonas, where the archbishop, with a part of his clergy and people, performed their
nocturnal devotions. The doors of the sacred edifice yielded to the impetuosity of the attack,
which was accompanied with every horrid circumstance of tumult and bloodshed; but, as the
bodies of the slain, and the fragments of military weapons, remained the next day an
unexceptionable evidence in the possession of the Catholics, the enterprise of Syrianus may be
considered as a successful irruption rather than as an absolute conquest. The other churches of
the city were profaned by similar outrages; and, during at least four months, Alexandria was
exposed to the insults of a licentious army, stimulated by the ecclesiastics of a hostile faction.
Many of the faithful were killed; who may deserve the name of martyrs, if their deaths were
neither provoked nor revenged; bishops and presbyters were treated with cruel ignominy;
consecrated virgins were stripped naked, scourged and violated; the houses of wealthy citizens
were plundered; and, under the mask of religious zeal, lust, avarice, and private resentment were
gratified with impunity, and even with applause. The Pagans of Alexandria, who still formed a
numerous and discontented party, were easily persuaded to desert a bishop whom they feared
and esteemed. The hopes of some peculiar favors, and the apprehension of being involved in the
general penalties of rebellion, engaged them to promise their support to the destined successor of
Athanasius, the famous George of Cappadocia. The usurper, after receiving the consecration of
an Arian synod, was placed on the episcopal throne by the arms of Sebastian, who had been
appointed Count of Egypt for the execution of that important design. In the use, as well as in the
acquisition, of power, the tyrant, George disregarded the laws of religion, of justice, and of
humanity; and the same scenes of violence and scandal which had been exhibited in the capital,
were repeated in more than ninety episcopal cities of Egypt. Encouraged by success, Constantius
ventured to approve the conduct of his minister. By a public and passionate epistle, the emperor
congratulates the deliverance of Alexandria from a popular tyrant, who deluded his blind
votaries by the magic of his eloquence; expatiates on the virtues and piety of the most reverend
George, the elected bishop; and aspires, as the patron and benefactor of the city to surpass the
fame of Alexander himself. But he solemnly declares his unalterable resolution to pursue with
fire and sword the seditious adherents of the wicked Athanasius, who, by flying from justice, has
confessed his guilt, and escaped the ignominious death which he had so often deserved.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church. -- Part VI.
Athanasius had indeed escaped from the most imminent dangers; and the adventures of that
extraordinary man deserve and fix our attention. On the memorable night when the church of St.
Theonas was invested by the troops of Syrianus, the archbishop, seated on his throne, expected,
with calm and intrepid dignity, the approach of death. While the public devotion was interrupted
by shouts of rage and cries of terror, he animated his trembling congregation to express their
religious confidence, by chanting one of the psalms of David which celebrates the triumph of the
God of Isræl over the haughty and impious tyrant of Egypt. The doors were at length burst open:
a cloud of arrows was discharged among the people; the soldiers, with drawn swords, rushed
forwards into the sanctuary; and the dreadful gleam of their arms was reflected by the holy
luminaries which burnt round the altar. Athanasius still rejected the pious importunity of the
monks and presbyters, who were attached to his person; and nobly refused to desert his episcopal
station, till he had dismissed in safety the last of the congregation. The darkness and tumult of
the night favored the retreat of the archbishop; and though he was oppressed by the waves of an
agitated multitude, though he was thrown to the ground, and left without sense or motion, he still
recovered his undaunted courage, and eluded the eager search of the soldiers, who were
instructed by their Arian guides, that the head of Athanasius would be the most acceptable
present to the emperor. From that moment the primate of Egypt disappeared from the eyes of his
enemies, and remained above six years concealed in impenetrable obscurity.
The despotic power of his implacable enemy filled the whole extent of the Roman world; and
the exasperated monarch had endeavored, by a very pressing epistle to the Christian princes of
Ethiopia, * to exclude Athanasius from the most remote and sequestered regions of the earth.
Counts, præfects, tribunes, whole armies, were successively employed to pursue a bishop and a
fugitive; the vigilance of the civil and military powers was excited by the Imperial edicts; liberal
rewards were promised to the man who should produce Athanasius, either alive or dead; and the
most severe penalties were denounced against those who should dare to protect the public
enemy. But the deserts of Thebais were now peopled by a race of wild, yet submissive fanatics,
who preferred the commands of their abbot to the laws of their sovereign. The numerous
disciples of Antony and Pachomius received the fugitive primate as their father, admired the
patience and humility with which he conformed to their strictest institutions, collected every
word which dropped from his lips as the genuine effusions of inspired wisdom; and persuaded
themselves that their prayers, their fasts, and their vigils, were less meritorious than the zeal
which they expressed, and the dangers which they braved, in the defence of truth and innocence.
The monasteries of Egypt were seated in lonely and desolate places, on the summit of
mountains, or in the islands of the Nile; and the sacred horn or trumpet of Tabenne was the
well-known signal which assembled several thousand robust and determined monks, who, for
the most part, had been the peasants of the adjacent country. When their dark retreats were
invaded by a military force, which it was impossible to resist, they silently stretched out their
necks to the executioner; and supported their national character, that tortures could never wrest
from an Egyptian the confession of a secret which he was resolved not to disclose. The
archbishop of Alexandria, for whose safety they eagerly devoted their lives, was lost among a
uniform and well-disciplined multitude; and on the nearer approach of danger, he was swiftly
removed, by their officious hands, from one place of concealment to another, till he reached the
formidable deserts, which the gloomy and credulous temper of superstition had peopled with
dæmons and savage monsters. The retirement of Athanasius, which ended only with the life of
Constantius, was spent, for the most part, in the society of the monks, who faithfully served him
as guards, as secretaries, and as messengers; but the importance of maintaining a more intimate
connection with the Catholic party tempted him, whenever the diligence of the pursuit was
abated, to emerge from the desert, to introduce himself into Alexandria, and to trust his person
to the discretion of his friends and adherents. His various adventures might have furnished the
subject of a very entertaining romance. He was once secreted in a dry cistern, which he had
scarcely left before he was betrayed by the treachery of a female slave; and he was once
concealed in a still more extraordinary asylum, the house of a virgin, only twenty years of age,
and who was celebrated in the whole city for her exquisite beauty. At the hour of midnight, as
she related the story many years afterwards, she was surprised by the appearance of the
archbishop in a loose undress, who, advancing with hasty steps, conjured her to afford him the
protection which he had been directed by a celestial vision to seek under her hospitable roof.
The pious maid accepted and preserved the sacred pledge which was intrusted to her prudence
and courage. Without imparting the secret to any one, she instantly conducted Athanasius into
her most secret chamber, and watched over his safety with the tenderness of a friend and the
assiduity of a servant. As long as the danger continued, she regularly supplied him with books
and provisions, washed his feet, managed his correspondence, and dexterously concealed from
the eye of suspicion this familiar and solitary intercourse between a saint whose character
required the most unblemished chastity, and a female whose charms might excite the most
dangerous emotions. During the six years of persecution and exile, Athanasius repeated his
visits to his fair and faithful companion; and the formal declaration, that he saw the councils of
Rimini and Seleucia, forces us to believe that he was secretly present at the time and place of
their convocation. The advantage of personally negotiating with his friends, and of observing
and improving the divisions of his enemies, might justify, in a prudent statesman, so bold and
dangerous an enterprise: and Alexandria was connected by trade and navigation with every
seaport of the Mediterranean. From the depth of his inaccessible retreat the intrepid primate
waged an incessant and offensive war against the protector of the Arians; and his seasonable
writings, which were diligently circulated and eagerly perused, contributed to unite and animate
the orthodox party. In his public apologies, which he addressed to the emperor himself, he
sometimes affected the praise of moderation; whilst at the same time, in secret and vehement
invectives, he exposed Constantius as a weak and wicked prince, the executioner of his family,
the tyrant of the republic, and the Antichrist of the church. In the height of his prosperity, the
victorious monarch, who had chastised the rashness of Gallus, and suppressed the revolt of
Sylvanus, who had taken the diadem from the head of Vetranio, and vanquished in the field the
legions of Magnentius, received from an invisible hand a wound, which he could neither heal
nor revenge; and the son of Constantine was the first of the Christian princes who experienced
the strength of those principles, which, in the cause of religion, could resist the most violent
exertions of the civil power.
The persecution of Athanasius, and of so many respectable bishops, who suffered for the truth of
their opinions, or at least for the integrity of their conscience, was a just subject of indignation
and discontent to all Christians, except those who were blindly devoted to the Arian faction. The
people regretted the loss of their faithful pastors, whose banishment was usually followed by the
intrusion of a stranger into the episcopal chair; and loudly complained, that the right of election
was violated, and that they were condemned to obey a mercenary usurper, whose person was
unknown, and whose principles were suspected. The Catholics might prove to the world, that
they were not involved in the guilt and heresy of their ecclesiastical governor, by publicly
testifying their dissent, or by totally separating themselves from his communion. The first of
these methods was invented at Antioch, and practised with such success, that it was soon
diffused over the Christian world. The doxology or sacred hymn, which celebrates the glory of
the Trinity, is susceptible of very nice, but material, inflections; and the substance of an
orthodox, or an heretical, creed, may be expressed by the difference of a disjunctive, or a
copulative, particle. Alternate responses, and a more regular psalmody, were introduced into the
public service by Flavianus and Diodorus, two devout and active laymen, who were attached to
the Nicene faith. Under their conduct a swarm of monks issued from the adjacent desert, bands
of well-disciplined singers were stationed in the cathedral of Antioch, the Glory to the Father,
And the Son, And the Holy Ghost, was triumphantly chanted by a full chorus of voices; and the
Catholics insulted, by the purity of their doctrine, the Arian prelate, who had usurped the throne
of the venerable Eustathius. The same zeal which inspired their songs prompted the more
scrupulous members of the orthodox party to form separate assemblies, which were governed by
the presbyters, till the death of their exiled bishop allowed the election and consecration of a
new episcopal pastor. The revolutions of the court multiplied the number of pretenders; and the
same city was often disputed, under the reign of Constantius, by two, or three, or even four,
bishops, who exercised their spiritual jurisdiction over their respective followers, and alternately
lost and regained the temporal possessions of the church. The abuse of Christianity introduced
into the Roman government new causes of tyranny and sedition; the bands of civil society were
torn asunder by the fury of religious factions; and the obscure citizen, who might calmly have
surveyed the elevation and fall of successive emperors, imagined and experienced, that his own
life and fortune were connected with the interests of a popular ecclesiastic. The example of the
two capitals, Rome and Constantinople, may serve to represent the state of the empire, and the
temper of mankind, under the reign of the sons of Constantine.
I. The Roman pontiff, as long as he maintained his station and his principles, was guarded by the
warm attachment of a great people; and could reject with scorn the prayers, the menaces, and the
oblations of an heretical prince. When the eunuchs had secretly pronounced the exile of
Liberius, the well-grounded apprehension of a tumult engaged them to use the utmost
precautions in the execution of the sentence. The capital was invested on every side, and the
præfect was commanded to seize the person of the bishop, either by stratagem or by open force.
The order was obeyed, and Liberius, with the greatest difficulty, at the hour of midnight, was
swiftly conveyed beyond the reach of the Roman people, before their consternation was turned
into rage. As soon as they were informed of his banishment into Thrace, a general assembly was
convened, and the clergy of Rome bound themselves, by a public and solemn oath, never to
desert their bishop, never to acknowledge the usurper Fælix; who, by the influence of the
eunuchs, had been irregularly chosen and consecrated within the walls of a profane palace. At
the end of two years, their pious obstinacy subsisted entire and unshaken; and when Constantius
visited Rome, he was assailed by the importunate solicitations of a people, who had preserved,
as the last remnant of their ancient freedom, the right of treating their sovereign with familiar
insolence. The wives of many of the senators and most honorable citizens, after pressing their
husbands to intercede in favor of Liberius, were advised to undertake a commission, which in
their hands would be less dangerous, and might prove more successful. The emperor received
with politeness these female deputies, whose wealth and dignity were displayed in the
magnificence of their dress and ornaments: he admired their inflexible resolution of following
their beloved pastor to the most distant regions of the earth; and consented that the two bishops,
Liberius and Fælix, should govern in peace their respective congregations. But the ideas of
toleration were so repugnant to the practice, and even to the sentiments, of those times, that
when the answer of Constantius was publicly read in the Circus of Rome, so reasonable a project
of accommodation was rejected with contempt and ridicule. The eager vehemence which
animated the spectators in the decisive moment of a horse-race, was now directed towards a
different object; and the Circus resounded with the shout of thousands, who repeatedly
exclaimed, "One God, One Christ, One Bishop!" The zeal of the Roman people in the cause of
Liberius was not confined to words alone; and the dangerous and bloody sedition which they
excited soon after the departure of Constantius determined that prince to accept the submission
of the exiled prelate, and to restore him to the undivided dominion of the capital. After some
ineffectual resistance, his rival was expelled from the city by the permission of the emperor and
the power of the opposite faction; the adherents of Fælix were inhumanly murdered in the
streets, in the public places, in the baths, and even in the churches; and the face of Rome, upon
the return of a Christian bishop, renewed the horrid image of the massacres of Marius, and the
proscriptions of Sylla.
II. Notwithstanding the rapid increase of Christians under the reign of the Flavian family, Rome,
Alexandria, and the other great cities of the empire, still contained a strong and powerful faction
of Infidels, who envied the prosperity, and who ridiculed, even in their theatres, the theological
disputes of the church. Constantinople alone enjoyed the advantage of being born and educated
in the bosom of the faith. The capital of the East had never been polluted by the worship of
idols; and the whole body of the people had deeply imbibed the opinions, the virtues, and the
passions, which distinguished the Christians of that age from the rest of mankind. After the
death of Alexander, the episcopal throne was disputed by Paul and Macedonius. By their zeal
and abilities they both deserved the eminent station to which they aspired; and if the moral
character of Macedonius was less exceptionable, his competitor had the advantage of a prior
election and a more orthodox doctrine. His firm attachment to the Nicene creed, which has given
Paul a place in the calendar among saints and martyrs, exposed him to the resentment of the
Arians. In the space of fourteen years he was five times driven from his throne; to which he was
more frequently restored by the violence of the people, than by the permission of the prince; and
the power of Macedonius could be secured only by the death of his rival. The unfortunate Paul
was dragged in chains from the sandy deserts of Mesopotamia to the most desolate places of
Mount Taurus, confined in a dark and narrow dungeon, left six days without food, and at length
strangled, by the order of Philip, one of the principal ministers of the emperor Constantius. The
first blood which stained the new capital was spilt in this ecclesiastical contest; and many
persons were slain on both sides, in the furious and obstinate seditions of the people. The
commission of enforcing a sentence of banishment against Paul had been intrusted to
Hermogenes, the master-general of the cavalry; but the execution of it was fatal to himself. The
Catholics rose in the defence of their bishop; the palace of Hermogenes was consumed; the first
military officer of the empire was dragged by the heels through the streets of Constantinople,
and, after he expired, his lifeless corpse was exposed to their wanton insults. The fate of
Hermogenes instructed Philip, the Prætorian præfect, to act with more precaution on a similar
occasion. In the most gentle and honorable terms, he required the attendance of Paul in the baths
of Zeuxippus, which had a private communication with the palace and the sea. A vessel, which
lay ready at the garden stairs, immediately hoisted sail; and, while the people were still ignorant
of the meditated sacrilege, their bishop was already embarked on his voyage to Thessalonica.
They soon beheld, with surprise and indignation, the gates of the palace thrown open, and the
usurper Macedonius seated by the side of the præfect on a lofty chariot, which was surrounded
by troops of guards with drawn swords. The military procession advanced towards the cathedral;
the Arians and the Catholics eagerly rushed to occupy that important post; and three thousand
one hundred and fifty persons lost their lives in the confusion of the tumult. Macedonius, who
was supported by a regular force, obtained a decisive victory; but his reign was disturbed by
clamor and sedition; and the causes which appeared the least connected with the subject of
dispute, were sufficient to nourish and to kindle the flame of civil discord. As the chapel in
which the body of the great Constantine had been deposited was in a ruinous condition, the
bishop transported those venerable remains into the church of St. Acacius. This prudent and
even pious measure was represented as a wicked profanation by the whole party which adhered
to the Homoousian doctrine. The factions immediately flew to arms, the consecrated ground was
used as their field of battle; and one of the ecclesiastical historians has observed, as a real fact,
not as a figure of rhetoric, that the well before the church overflowed with a stream of blood,
which filled the porticos and the adjacent courts. The writer who should impute these tumults
solely to a religious principle, would betray a very imperfect knowledge of human nature; yet it
must be confessed that the motive which misled the sincerity of zeal, and the pretence which
disguised the licentiousness of passion, suppressed the remorse which, in another cause, would
have succeeded to the rage of the Christians at Constantinople.
Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church. -- Part VII.
The cruel and arbitrary disposition of Constantius, which did not always require the provocations
of guilt and resistance, was justly exasperated by the tumults of his capital, and the criminal
behavior of a faction, which opposed the authority and religion of their sovereign. The ordinary
punishments of death, exile, and confiscation, were inflicted with partial vigor; and the Greeks
still revere the holy memory of two clerks, a reader, and a sub-deacon, who were accused of the
murder of Hermogenes, and beheaded at the gates of Constantinople. By an edict of Constantius
against the Catholics which has not been judged worthy of a place in the Theodosian code, those
who refused to communicate with the Arian bishops, and particularly with Macedonius, were
deprived of the immunities of ecclesiastics, and of the rights of Christians; they were compelled
to relinquish the possession of the churches; and were strictly prohibited from holding their
assemblies within the walls of the city. The execution of this unjust law, in the provinces of
Thrace and Asia Minor, was committed to the zeal of Macedonius; the civil and military powers
were directed to obey his commands; and the cruelties exercised by this Semi-Arian tyrant in the
support of the Homoiousion, exceeded the commission, and disgraced the reign, of Constantius.
The sacraments of the church were administered to the reluctant victims, who denied the
vocation, and abhorred the principles, of Macedonius. The rites of baptism were conferred on
women and children, who, for that purpose, had been torn from the arms of their friends and
parents; the mouths of the communicants were held open by a wooden engine, while the
consecrated bread was forced down their throat; the breasts of tender virgins were either burnt
with red-hot egg-shells, or inhumanly compressed between sharp and heavy boards. The
Novatians of Constantinople and the adjacent country, by their firm attachment to the
Homoousian standard, deserved to be confounded with the Catholics themselves. Macedonius
was informed, that a large district of Paphlagonia was almost entirely inhabited by those
sectaries. He resolved either to convert or to extirpate them; and as he distrusted, on this
occasion, the efficacy of an ecclesiastical mission, he commanded a body of four thousand
legionaries to march against the rebels, and to reduce the territory of Mantinium under his
spiritual dominion. The Novatian peasants, animated by despair and religious fury, boldly
encountered the invaders of their country; and though many of the Paphlagonians were slain, the
Roman legions were vanquished by an irregular multitude, armed only with scythes and axes;
and, except a few who escaped by an ignominious flight, four thousand soldiers were left dead
on the field of battle. The successor of Constantius has expressed, in a concise but lively
manner, some of the theological calamities which afflicted the empire, and more especially the
East, in the reign of a prince who was the slave of his own passions, and of those of his eunuchs:
"Many were imprisoned, and persecuted, and driven into exile. Whole troops of those who are
styled heretics, were massacred, particularly at Cyzicus, and at Samosata. In Paphlagonia,
Bithynia, Galatia, and in many other provinces, towns and villages were laid waste, and utterly
destroyed.
While the flames of the Arian controversy consumed the vitals of the empire, the African
provinces were infested by their peculiar enemies, the savage fanatics, who, under the name of
Circumcellions, formed the strength and scandal of the Donatist party. The severe execution of
the laws of Constantine had excited a spirit of discontent and resistance, the strenuous efforts of
his son Constans, to restore the unity of the church, exasperated the sentiments of mutual hatred,
which had first occasioned the separation; and the methods of force and corruption employed by
the two Imperial commissioners, Paul and Macarius, furnished the schismatics with a specious
contrast between the maxims of the apostles and the conduct of their pretended successors. The
peasants who inhabited the villages of Numidia and Mauritania, were a ferocious race, who had
been imperfectly reduced under the authority of the Roman laws; who were imperfectly
converted to the Christian faith; but who were actuated by a blind and furious enthusiasm in the
cause of their Donatist teachers. They indignantly supported the exile of their bishops, the
demolition of their churches, and the interruption of their secret assemblies. The violence of the
officers of justice, who were usually sustained by a military guard, was sometimes repelled with
equal violence; and the blood of some popular ecclesiastics, which had been shed in the quarrel,
inflamed their rude followers with an eager desire of revenging the death of these holy martyrs.
By their own cruelty and rashness, the ministers of persecution sometimes provoked their fate;
and the guilt of an accidental tumult precipitated the criminals into despair and rebellion. Driven
from their native villages, the Donatist peasants assembled in formidable gangs on the edge of
the Getulian desert; and readily exchanged the habits of labor for a life of idleness and rapine,
which was consecrated by the name of religion, and faintly condemned by the doctors of the
sect. The leaders of the Circumcellions assumed the title of captains of the saints; their principal
weapon, as they were indifferently provided with swords and spears, was a huge and weighty
club, which they termed an Israelite; and the well-known sound of "Praise be to God," which
they used as their cry of war, diffused consternation over the unarmed provinces of Africa. At
first their depredations were colored by the plea of necessity; but they soon exceeded the
measure of subsistence, indulged without control their intemperance and avarice, burnt the
villages which they had pillaged, and reigned the licentious tyrants of the open country. The
occupations of husbandry, and the administration of justice, were interrupted; and as the
Circumcellions pretended to restore the primitive equality of mankind, and to reform the abuses
of civil society, they opened a secure asylum for the slaves and debtors, who flocked in crowds
to their holy standard. When they were not resisted, they usually contented themselves with
plunder, but the slightest opposition provoked them to acts of violence and murder; and some
Catholic priests, who had imprudently signalized their zeal, were tortured by the fanatics with
the most refined and wanton barbarity. The spirit of the Circumcellions was not always exerted
against their defenceless enemies; they engaged, and sometimes defeated, the troops of the
province; and in the bloody action of Bagai, they attacked in the open field, but with
unsuccessful valor, an advanced guard of the Imperial cavalry. The Donatists who were taken in
arms, received, and they soon deserved, the same treatment which might have been shown to the
wild beasts of the desert. The captives died, without a murmur, either by the sword, the axe, or
the fire; and the measures of retaliation were multiplied in a rapid proportion, which aggravated
the horrors of rebellion, and excluded the hope of mutual forgiveness. In the beginning of the
present century, the example of the Circumcellions has been renewed in the persecution, the
boldness, the crimes, and the enthusiasm of the Camisards; and if the fanatics of Languedoc
surpassed those of Numidia, by their military achievements, the Africans maintained their fierce
independence with more resolution and perseverance.
Such disorders are the natural effects of religious tyranny, but the rage of the Donatists was
inflamed by a frenzy of a very extraordinary kind; and which, if it really prevailed among them
in so extravagant a degree, cannot surely be paralleled in any country or in any age. Many of
these fanatics were possessed with the horror of life, and the desire of martyrdom; and they
deemed it of little moment by what means, or by what hands, they perished, if their conduct was
sanctified by the intention of devoting themselves to the glory of the true faith, and the hope of
eternal happiness. Sometimes they rudely disturbed the festivals, and profaned the temples of
Paganism, with the design of exciting the most zealous of the idolaters to revenge the insulted
honor of their gods. They sometimes forced their way into the courts of justice, and compelled
the affrighted judge to give orders for their immediate execution. They frequently stopped
travellers on the public highways, and obliged them to inflict the stroke of martyrdom, by the
promise of a reward, if they consented, and by the threat of instant death, if they refused to grant
so very singular a favor. When they were disappointed of every other resource, they announced
the day on which, in the presence of their friends and brethren, they should east themselves
headlong from some lofty rock; and many precipices were shown, which had acquired fame by
the number of religious suicides. In the actions of these desperate enthusiasts, who were admired
by one party as the martyrs of God, and abhorred by the other as the victims of Satan, an
impartial philosopher may discover the influence and the last abuse of that inflexible spirit
which was originally derived from the character and principles of the Jewish nation.
The simple narrative of the intestine divisions, which distracted the peace, and dishonored the
triumph, of the church, will confirm the remark of a Pagan historian, and justify the complaint of
a venerable bishop. The experience of Ammianus had convinced him, that the enmity of the
Christians towards each other, surpassed the fury of savage beasts against man; and Gregory
Nazianzen most pathetically laments, that the kingdom of heaven was converted, by discord, into
the image of chaos, of a nocturnal tempest, and of hell itself. The fierce and partial writers of
the times, ascribing all virtue to themselves, and imputing all guilt to their adversaries, have
painted the battle of the angels and dæmons. Our calmer reason will reject such pure and perfect
monsters of vice or sanctity, and will impute an equal, or at least an indiscriminate, measure of
good and evil to the hostile sectaries, who assumed and bestowed the appellations of orthodox
and heretics. They had been educated in the same religion and the same civil society. Their
hopes and fears in the present, or in a future life, were balanced in the same proportion. On
either side, the error might be innocent, the faith sincere, the practice meritorious or corrupt.
Their passions were excited by similar objects; and they might alternately abuse the favor of the
court, or of the people. The metaphysical opinions of the Athanasians and the Arians could not
influence their moral character; and they were alike actuated by the intolerant spirit which has
been extracted from the pure and simple maxims of the gospel.
A modern writer, who, with a just confidence, has prefixed to his own history the honorable
epithets of political and philosophical, accuses the timid prudence of Montesquieu, for
neglecting to enumerate, among the causes of the decline of the empire, a law of Constantine, by
which the exercise of the Pagan worship was absolutely suppressed, and a considerable part of
his subjects was left destitute of priests, of temples, and of any public religion. The zeal of the
philosophic historian for the rights of mankind, has induced him to acquiesce in the ambiguous
testimony of those ecclesiastics, who have too lightly ascribed to their favorite hero the merit of
a general persecution. Instead of alleging this imaginary law, which would have blazed in the
front of the Imperial codes, we may safely appeal to the original epistle, which Constantine
addressed to the followers of the ancient religion; at a time when he no longer disguised his
conversion, nor dreaded the rivals of his throne. He invites and exhorts, in the most pressing
terms, the subjects of the Roman empire to imitate the example of their master; but he declares,
that those who still refuse to open their eyes to the celestial light, may freely enjoy their temples
and their fancied gods. A report, that the ceremonies of paganism were suppressed, is formally
contradicted by the emperor himself, who wisely assigns, as the principle of his moderation, the
invincible force of habit, of prejudice, and of superstition. Without violating the sanctity of his
promise, without alarming the fears of the Pagans, the artful monarch advanced, by slow and
cautious steps, to undermine the irregular and decayed fabric of polytheism. The partial acts of
severity which he occasionally exercised, though they were secretly promoted by a Christian
zeal, were colored by the fairest pretences of justice and the public good; and while Constantine
designed to ruin the foundations, he seemed to reform the abuses, of the ancient religion. After
the example of the wisest of his predecessors, he condemned, under the most rigorous penalties,
the occult and impious arts of divination; which excited the vain hopes, and sometimes the
criminal attempts, of those who were discontented with their present condition. An ignominious
silence was imposed on the oracles, which had been publicly convicted of fraud and falsehood;
the effeminate priests of the Nile were abolished; and Constantine discharged the duties of a
Roman censor, when he gave orders for the demolition of several temples of Phnicia; in which
every mode of prostitution was devoutly practised in the face of day, and to the honor of Venus.
The Imperial city of Constantinople was, in some measure, raised at the expense, and was
adorned with the spoils, of the opulent temples of Greece and Asia; the sacred property was
confiscated; the statues of gods and heroes were transported, with rude familiarity, among a
people who considered them as objects, not of adoration, but of curiosity; the gold and silver
were restored to circulation; and the magistrates, the bishops, and the eunuchs, improved the
fortunate occasion of gratifying, at once, their zeal, their avarice, and their resentment. But these
depredations were confined to a small part of the Roman world; and the provinces had been long
since accustomed to endure the same sacrilegious rapine, from the tyranny of princes and
proconsuls, who could not be suspected of any design to subvert the established religion.
The sons of Constantine trod in the footsteps of their father, with more zeal, and with less
discretion. The pretences of rapine and oppression were insensibly multiplied; every indulgence
was shown to the illegal behavior of the Christians; every doubt was explained to the
disadvantage of Paganism; and the demolition of the temples was celebrated as one of the
auspicious events of the reign of Constans and Constantius. The name of Constantius is prefixed
to a concise law, which might have superseded the necessity of any future prohibitions. "It is our
pleasure, that in all places, and in all cities, the temples be immediately shut, and carefully
guarded, that none may have the power of offending. It is likewise our pleasure, that all our
subjects should abstain from sacrifices. If any one should be guilty of such an act, let him feel
the sword of vengeance, and after his execution, let his property be confiscated to the public use.
We denounce the same penalties against the governors of the provinces, if they neglect to punish
the criminals." But there is the strongest reason to believe, that this formidable edict was either
composed without being published, or was published without being executed. The evidence of
facts, and the monuments which are still extant of brass and marble, continue to prove the public
exercise of the Pagan worship during the whole reign of the sons of Constantine. In the East, as
well as in the West, in cities, as well as in the country, a great number of temples were
respected, or at least were spared; and the devout multitude still enjoyed the luxury of sacrifices,
of festivals, and of processions, by the permission, or by the connivance, of the civil government.
About four years after the supposed date of this bloody edict, Constantius visited the temples of
Rome; and the decency of his behavior is recommended by a pagan orator as an example worthy
of the imitation of succeeding princes. "That emperor," says Symmachus, "suffered the
privileges of the vestal virgins to remain inviolate; he bestowed the sacerdotal dignities on the
nobles of Rome, granted the customary allowance to defray the expenses of the public rites and
sacrifices; and, though he had embraced a different religion, he never attempted to deprive the
empire of the sacred worship of antiquity." The senate still presumed to consecrate, by solemn
decrees, the divine memory of their sovereigns; and Constantine himself was associated, after
his death, to those gods whom he had renounced and insulted during his life. The title, the
ensigns, the prerogatives, of sovereign pontiff, which had been instituted by Numa, and assumed
by Augustus, were accepted, without hesitation, by seven Christian emperors; who were invested
with a more absolute authority over the religion which they had deserted, than over that which
they professed.
The divisions of Christianity suspended the ruin of Paganism; and the holy war against the
infidels was less vigorously prosecuted by princes and bishops, who were more immediately
alarmed by the guilt and danger of domestic rebellion. The extirpation of idolatry might have
been justified by the established principles of intolerance: but the hostile sects, which alternately
reigned in the Imperial court were mutually apprehensive of alienating, and perhaps
exasperating, the minds of a powerful, though declining faction. Every motive of authority and
fashion, of interest and reason, now militated on the side of Christianity; but two or three
generations elapsed, before their victorious influence was universally felt. The religion which
had so long and so lately been established in the Roman empire was still revered by a numerous
people, less attached indeed to speculative opinion, than to ancient custom. The honors of the
state and army were indifferently bestowed on all the subjects of Constantine and Constantius;
and a considerable portion of knowledge and wealth and valor was still engaged in the service of
polytheism. The superstition of the senator and of the peasant, of the poet and the philosopher,
was derived from very different causes, but they met with equal devotion in the temples of the
gods. Their zeal was insensibly provoked by the insulting triumph of a proscribed sect; and their
hopes were revived by the well-grounded confidence, that the presumptive heir of the empire, a
young and valiant hero, who had delivered Gaul from the arms of the Barbarians, had secretly
embraced the religion of his ancestors.
Chapter XXII: Julian Declared Emperor.
Part I
Julian Is Declared Emperor By The Legions Of Gaul. -- His March And Success. -- The Death Of
Constantius. -- Civil Administration Of Julian.
While the Romans languished under the ignominious tyranny of eunuchs and bishops, the praises
of Julian were repeated with transport in every part of the empire, except in the palace of
Constantius. The barbarians of Germany had felt, and still dreaded, the arms of the young Cæsar;
his soldiers were the companions of his victory; the grateful provincials enjoyed the blessings of
his reign; but the favorites, who had opposed his elevation, were offended by his virtues; and
they justly considered the friend of the people as the enemy of the court. As long as the fame of
Julian was doubtful, the buffoons of the palace, who were skilled in the language of satire, tried
the efficacy of those arts which they had so often practised with success. They easily discovered,
that his simplicity was not exempt from affectation: the ridiculous epithets of a hairy savage, of
an ape invested with the purple, were applied to the dress and person of the philosophic warrior;
and his modest despatches were stigmatized as the vain and elaborate fictions of a loquacious
Greek, a speculative soldier, who had studied the art of war amidst the groves of the academy.
The voice of malicious folly was at length silenced by the shouts of victory; the conqueror of the
Franks and Alemanni could no longer be painted as an object of contempt; and the monarch
himself was meanly ambitious of stealing from his lieutenant the honorable reward of his labors.
In the letters crowned with laurel, which, according to ancient custom, were addressed to the
provinces, the name of Julian was omitted. "Constantius had made his dispositions in person;
hehad signalized his valor in the foremost ranks; his military conduct had secured the victory;
and the captive king of the barbarians was presented to him on the field of battle," from which
he was at that time distant about forty days' journey. So extravagant a fable was incapable,
however, of deceiving the public credulity, or even of satisfying the pride of the emperor
himself. Secretly conscious that the applause and favor of the Romans accompanied the rising
fortunes of Julian, his discontented mind was prepared to receive the subtle poison of those
artful sycophants, who colored their mischievous designs with the fairest appearances of truth
and candor. Instead of depreciating the merits of Julian, they acknowledged, and even
exaggerated, his popular fame, superior talents, and important services. But they darkly
insinuated, that the virtues of the Cæsar might instantly be converted into the most dangerous
crimes, if the inconstant multitude should prefer their inclinations to their duty; or if the general
of a victorious army should be tempted from his allegiance by the hopes of revenge and
independent greatness. The personal fears of Constantius were interpreted by his council as a
laudable anxiety for the public safety; whilst in private, and perhaps in his own breast, he
disguised, under the less odious appellation of fear, the sentiments of hatred and envy, which he
had secretly conceived for the inimitable virtues of Julian.
The apparent tranquillity of Gaul, and the imminent danger of the eastern provinces, offered a
specious pretence for the design which was artfully concerted by the Imperial ministers. They
resolved to disarm the Cæsar; to recall those faithful troops who guarded his person and dignity;
and to employ, in a distant war against the Persian monarch, the hardy veterans who had
vanquished, on the banks of the Rhine, the fiercest nations of Germany. While Julian used the
laborious hours of his winter quarters at Paris in the administration of power, which, in his
hands, was the exercise of virtue, he was surprised by the hasty arrival of a tribune and a notary,
with positive orders, from the emperor, which they were directed to execute, and he was
commanded not to oppose. Constantius signified his pleasure, that four entire legions, the Celtæ,
and Petulants, the Heruli, and the Batavians, should be separated from the standard of Julian,
under which they had acquired their fame and discipline; that in each of the remaining bands
three hundred of the bravest youths should be selected; and that this numerous detachment, the
strength of the Gallic army, should instantly begin their march, and exert their utmost diligence
to arrive, before the opening of the campaign, on the frontiers of Persia. The Cæsar foresaw and
lamented the consequences of this fatal mandate. Most of the auxiliaries, who engaged their
voluntary service, had stipulated, that they should never be obliged to pass the Alps. The public
faith of Rome, and the personal honor of Julian, had been pledged for the observance of this
condition. Such an act of treachery and oppression would destroy the confidence, and excite the
resentment, of the independent warriors of Germany, who considered truth as the noblest of their
virtues, and freedom as the most valuable of their possessions. The legionaries, who enjoyed the
title and privileges of Romans, were enlisted for the general defence of the republic; but those
mercenary troops heard with cold indifference the antiquated names of the republic and of
Rome. Attached, either from birth or long habit, to the climate and manners of Gaul, they loved
and admired Julian; they despised, and perhaps hated, the emperor; they dreaded the laborious
march, the Persian arrows, and the burning deserts of Asia. They claimed as their own the
country which they had saved; and excused their want of spirit, by pleading the sacred and more
immediate duty of protecting their families and friends. The apprehensions of the Gauls were
derived from the knowledge of the impending and inevitable danger. As soon as the provinces
were exhausted of their military strength, the Germans would violate a treaty which had been
imposed on their fears; and notwithstanding the abilities and valor of Julian, the general of a
nominal army, to whom the public calamities would be imputed, must find himself, after a vain
resistance, either a prisoner in the camp of the barbarians, or a criminal in the palace of
Constantius. If Julian complied with the orders which he had received, he subscribed his own
destruction, and that of a people who deserved his affection. But a positive refusal was an act of
rebellion, and a declaration of war. The inexorable jealousy of the emperor, the peremptory, and
perhaps insidious, nature of his commands, left not any room for a fair apology, or candid
interpretation; and the dependent station of the Cæsar scarcely allowed him to pause or to
deliberate. Solitude increased the perplexity of Julian; he could no longer apply to the faithful
counsels of Sallust, who had been removed from his office by the judicious malice of the
eunuchs: he could not even enforce his representations by the concurrence of the ministers, who
would have been afraid or ashamed to approve the ruin of Gaul. The moment had been chosen,
when Lupicinus, the general of the cavalry, was despatched into Britain, to repulse the inroads
of the Scots and Picts; and Florentius was occupied at Vienna by the assessment of the tribute.
The latter, a crafty and corrupt statesman, declining to assume a responsible part on this
dangerous occasion, eluded the pressing and repeated invitations of Julian, who represented to
him, that in every important measure, the presence of the præfect was indispensable in the
council of the prince. In the mean while the Cæsar was oppressed by the rude and importunate
solicitations of the Imperial messengers, who presumed to suggest, that if he expected the return
of his ministers, he would charge himself with the guilt of the delay, and reserve for them the
merit of the execution. Unable to resist, unwilling to comply, Julian expressed, in the most
serious terms, his wish, and even his intention, of resigning the purple, which he could not
preserve with honor, but which he could not abdicate with safety.
After a painful conflict, Julian was compelled to acknowledge, that obedience was the virtue of
the most eminent subject, and that the sovereign alone was entitled to judge of the public
welfare. He issued the necessary orders for carrying into execution the commands of
Constantius; a part of the troops began their march for the Alps; and the detachments from the
several garrisons moved towards their respective places of assembly. They advanced with
difficulty through the trembling and affrighted crowds of provincials, who attempted to excite
their pity by silent despair, or loud lamentations, while the wives of the soldiers, holding their
infants in their arms, accused the desertion of their husbands, in the mixed language of grief, of
tenderness, and of indignation. This scene of general distress afflicted the humanity of the
Cæsar; he granted a sufficient number of post-wagons to transport the wives and families of the
soldiers, endeavored to alleviate the hardships which he was constrained to inflict, and
increased, by the most laudable arts, his own popularity, and the discontent of the exiled troops.
The grief of an armed multitude is soon converted into rage; their licentious murmurs, which
every hour were communicated from tent to tent with more boldness and effect, prepared their
minds for the most daring acts of sedition; and by the connivance of their tribunes, a seasonable
libel was secretly dispersed, which painted in lively colors the disgrace of the Cæsar, the
oppression of the Gallic army, and the feeble vices of the tyrant of Asia. The servants of
Constantius were astonished and alarmed by the progress of this dangerous spirit. They pressed
the Cæsar to hasten the departure of the troops; but they imprudently rejected the honest and
judicious advice of Julian; who proposed that they should not march through Paris, and
suggested the danger and temptation of a last interview.
As soon as the approach of the troops was announced, the Cæsar went out to meet them, and
ascended his tribunal, which had been erected in a plain before the gates of the city. After
distinguishing the officers and soldiers, who by their rank or merit deserved a peculiar attention,
Julian addressed himself in a studied oration to the surrounding multitude: he celebrated their
exploits with grateful applause; encouraged them to accept, with alacrity, the honor of serving
under the eye of a powerful and liberal monarch; and admonished them, that the commands of
Augustus required an instant and cheerful obedience. The soldiers, who were apprehensive of
offending their general by an indecent clamor, or of belying their sentiments by false and venal
acclamations, maintained an obstinate silence; and after a short pause, were dismissed to their
quarters. The principal officers were entertained by the Cæsar, who professed, in the warmest
language of friendship, his desire and his inability to reward, according to their deserts, the brave
companions of his victories. They retired from the feast, full of grief and perplexity; and
lamented the hardship of their fate, which tore them from their beloved general and their native
country. The only expedient which could prevent their separation was boldly agitated and
approved the popular resentment was insensibly moulded into a regular conspiracy; their just
reasons of complaint were heightened by passion, and their passions were inflamed by wine; as,
on the eve of their departure, the troops were indulged in licentious festivity. At the hour of
midnight, the impetuous multitude, with swords, and bows, and torches in their hands, rushed
into the suburbs; encompassed the palace; and, careless of future dangers, pronounced the fatal
and irrevocable words, Julian Augustus! The prince, whose anxious suspense was interrupted by
their disorderly acclamations, secured the doors against their intrusion; and as long as it was in
his power, secluded his person and dignity from the accidents of a nocturnal tumult. At the dawn
of day, the soldiers, whose zeal was irritated by opposition, forcibly entered the palace, seized,
with respectful violence, the object of their choice, guarded Julian with drawn swords through
the streets of Paris, placed him on the tribunal, and with repeated shouts saluted him as their
emperor. Prudence, as well as loyalty, inculcated the propriety of resisting their treasonable
designs; and of preparing, for his oppressed virtue, the excuse of violence. Addressing himself
by turns to the multitude and to individuals, he sometimes implored their mercy, and sometimes
expressed his indignation; conjured them not to sully the fame of their immortal victories; and
ventured to promise, that if they would immediately return to their allegiance, he would
undertake to obtain from the emperor not only a free and gracious pardon, but even the
revocation of the orders which had excited their resentment. But the soldiers, who were
conscious of their guilt, chose rather to depend on the gratitude of Julian, than on the clemency
of the emperor. Their zeal was insensibly turned into impatience, and their impatience into rage.
The inflexible Cæsar sustained, till the third hour of the day, their prayers, their reproaches, and
their menaces; nor did he yield, till he had been repeatedly assured, that if he wished to live, he
must consent to reign. He was exalted on a shield in the presence, and amidst the unanimous
acclamations, of the troops; a rich military collar, which was offered by chance, supplied the
want of a diadem; the ceremony was concluded by the promise of a moderate donative; and the
new emperor, overwhelmed with real or affected grief retired into the most secret recesses of his
apartment.
The grief of Julian could proceed only from his innocence; out his innocence must appear
extremely doubtful in the eyes of those who have learned to suspect the motives and the
professions of princes. His lively and active mind was susceptible of the various impressions of
hope and fear, of gratitude and revenge, of duty and of ambition, of the love of fame, and of the
fear of reproach. But it is impossible for us to calculate the respective weight and operation of
these sentiments; or to ascertain the principles of action which might escape the observation,
while they guided, or rather impelled, the steps of Julian himself. The discontent of the troops
was produced by the malice of his enemies; their tumult was the natural effect of interest and of
passion; and if Julian had tried to conceal a deep design under the appearances of chance, he
must have employed the most consummate artifice without necessity, and probably without
success. He solemnly declares, in the presence of Jupiter, of the Sun, of Mars, of Minerva, and
of all the other deities, that till the close of the evening which preceded his elevation, he was
utterly ignorant of the designs of the soldiers; and it may seem ungenerous to distrust the honor
of a hero and the truth of a philosopher. Yet the superstitious confidence that Constantius was
the enemy, and that he himself was the favorite, of the gods, might prompt him to desire, to
solicit, and even to hasten the auspicious moment of his reign, which was predestined to restore
the ancient religion of mankind. When Julian had received the intelligence of the conspiracy, he
resigned himself to a short slumber; and afterwards related to his friends that he had seen the
genius of the empire waiting with some impatience at his door, pressing for admittance, and
reproaching his want of spirit and ambition. Astonished and perplexed, he addressed his prayers
to the great Jupiter, who immediately signified, by a clear and manifest omen, that he should
submit to the will of heaven and of the army. The conduct which disclaims the ordinary maxims
of reason, excites our suspicion and eludes our inquiry. Whenever the spirit of fanaticism, at
once so credulous and so crafty, has insinuated itself into a noble mind, it insensibly corrodes the
vital principles of virtue and veracity.
To moderate the zeal of his party, to protect the persons of his enemies, to defeat and to despise
the secret enterprises which were formed against his life and dignity, were the cares which
employed the first days of the reign of the new emperor. Although he was firmly resolved to
maintain the station which he had assumed, he was still desirous of saving his country from the
calamities of civil war, of declining a contest with the superior forces of Constantius, and of
preserving his own character from the reproach of perfidy and ingratitude. Adorned with the
ensigns of military and imperial pomp, Julian showed himself in the field of Mars to the
soldiers, who glowed with ardent enthusiasm in the cause of their pupil, their leader, and their
friend. He recapitulated their victories, lamented their sufferings, applauded their resolution,
animated their hopes, and checked their impetuosity; nor did he dismiss the assembly, till he had
obtained a solemn promise from the troops, that if the emperor of the East would subscribe an
equitable treaty, they would renounce any views of conquest, and satisfy themselves with the
tranquil possession of the Gallic provinces. On this foundation he composed, in his own name,
and in that of the army, a specious and moderate epistle, which was delivered to Pentadius, his
master of the offices, and to his chamberlain Eutherius; two ambassadors whom he appointed to
receive the answer, and observe the dispositions of Constantius. This epistle is inscribed with the
modest appellation of Cæsar; but Julian solicits in a peremptory, though respectful, manner, the
confirmation of the title of Augustus. He acknowledges the irregularity of his own election,
while he justifies, in some measure, the resentment and violence of the troops which had
extorted his reluctant consent. He allows the supremacy of his brother Constantius; and engages
to send him an annual present of Spanish horses, to recruit his army with a select number of
barbarian youths, and to accept from his choice a Prætorian præfect of approved discretion and
fidelity. But he reserves for himself the nomination of his other civil and military officers, with
the troops, the revenue, and the sovereignty of the provinces beyond the Alps. He admonishes
the emperor to consult the dictates of justice; to distrust the arts of those venal flatterers, who
subsist only by the discord of princes; and to embrace the offer of a fair and honorable treaty,
equally advantageous to the republic and to the house of Constantine. In this negotiation Julian
claimed no more than he already possessed. The delegated authority which he had long
exercised over the provinces of Gaul, Spain, and Britain, was still obeyed under a name more
independent and august. The soldiers and the people rejoiced in a revolution which was not
stained even with the blood of the guilty. Florentius was a fugitive; Lupicinus a prisoner. The
persons who were disaffected to the new government were disarmed and secured; and the vacant
offices were distributed, according to the recommendation of merit, by a prince who despised
the intrigues of the palace, and the clamors of the soldiers.
The negotiations of peace were accompanied and supported by the most vigorous preparations
for war. The army, which Julian held in readiness for immediate action, was recruited and
augmented by the disorders of the times. The cruel persecutions of the faction of Magnentius
had filled Gaul with numerous bands of outlaws and robbers. They cheerfully accepted the offer
of a general pardon from a prince whom they could trust, submitted to the restraints of military
discipline, and retained only their implacable hatred to the person and government of
Constantius. As soon as the season of the year permitted Julian to take the field, he appeared at
the head of his legions; threw a bridge over the Rhine in the neighborhood of Cleves; and
prepared to chastise the perfidy of the Attuarii, a tribe of Franks, who presumed that they might
ravage, with impunity, the frontiers of a divided empire. The difficulty, as well as glory, of this
enterprise, consisted in a laborious march; and Julian had conquered, as soon as he could
penetrate into a country, which former princes had considered as inaccessible. After he had
given peace to the Barbarians, the emperor carefully visited the fortifications along the Rhine
from Cleves to Basil; surveyed, with peculiar attention, the territories which he had recovered
from the hands of the Alemanni, passed through Besançon, which had severely suffered from
their fury, and fixed his headquarters at Vienna for the ensuing winter. The barrier of Gaul was
improved and strengthened with additional fortifications; and Julian entertained some hopes that
the Germans, whom he had so often vanquished, might, in his absence, be restrained by the
terror of his name. Vadomair was the only prince of the Alemanni whom he esteemed or feared
and while the subtle Barbarian affected to observe the faith of treaties, the progress of his arms
threatened the state with an unseasonable and dangerous war. The policy of Julian condescended
to surprise the prince of the Alemanni by his own arts: and Vadomair, who, in the character of a
friend, had incautiously accepted an invitation from the Roman governors, was seized in the
midst of the entertainment, and sent away prisoner into the heart of Spain. Before the Barbarians
were recovered from their amazement, the emperor appeared in arms on the banks of the Rhine,
and, once more crossing the river, renewed the deep impressions of terror and respect which had
been already made by four preceding expeditions.
Chapter XXII: Julian Declared Emperor. -- Part II.
The ambassadors of Julian had been instructed to execute, with the utmost diligence, their
important commission. But, in their passage through Italy and Illyricum, they were detained by
the tedious and affected delays of the provincial governors; they were conducted by slow
journeys from Constantinople to Cæsarea in Cappadocia; and when at length they were admitted
to the presence of Constantius, they found that he had already conceived, from the despatches of
his own officers, the most unfavorable opinion of the conduct of Julian, and of the Gallic army.
The letters were heard with impatience; the trembling messengers were dismissed with
indignation and contempt; and the looks, gestures, the furious language of the monarch,
expressed the disorder of his soul. The domestic connection, which might have reconciled the
brother and the husband of Helena, was recently dissolved by the death of that princess, whose
pregnancy had been several times fruitless, and was at last fatal to herself. The empress Eusebia
had preserved, to the last moment of her life, the warm, and even jealous, affection which she
had conceived for Julian; and her mild influence might have moderated the resentment of a
prince, who, since her death, was abandoned to his own passions, and to the arts of his eunuchs.
But the terror of a foreign invasion obliged him to suspend the punishment of a private enemy:
he continued his march towards the confines of Persia, and thought it sufficient to signify the
conditions which might entitle Julian and his guilty followers to the clemency of their offended
sovereign. He required, that the presumptuous Cæsar should expressly renounce the appellation
and rank of Augustus, which he had accepted from the rebels; that he should descend to his
former station of a limited and dependent minister; that he should vest the powers of the state
and army in the hands of those officers who were appointed by the Imperial court; and that he
should trust his safety to the assurances of pardon, which were announced by Epictetus, a Gallic
bishop, and one of the Arian favorites of Constantius. Several months were ineffectually
consumed in a treaty which was negotiated at the distance of three thousand miles between Paris
and Antioch; and, as soon as Julian perceived that his modest and respectful behavior served
only to irritate the pride of an implacable adversary, he boldly resolved to commit his life and
fortune to the chance of a civil war. He gave a public and military audience to the quæstor
Leonas: the haughty epistle of Constantius was read to the attentive multitude; and Julian
protested, with the most flattering deference, that he was ready to resign the title of Augustus, if
he could obtain the consent of those whom he acknowledged as the authors of his elevation. The
faint proposal was impetuously silenced; and the acclamations of "Julian Augustus, continue to
reign, by the authority of the army, of the people, of the republic which you have saved,"
thundered at once from every part of the field, and terrified the pale ambassador of Constantius.
A part of the letter was afterwards read, in which the emperor arraigned the ingratitude of Julian,
whom he had invested with the honors of the purple; whom he had educated with so much care
and tenderness; whom he had preserved in his infancy, when he was left a helpless orphan. "An
orphan!" interrupted Julian, who justified his cause by indulging his passions: "does the assassin
of my family reproach me that I was left an orphan? He urges me to revenge those injuries which
I have long studied to forget." The assembly was dismissed; and Leonas, who, with some
difficulty, had been protected from the popular fury, was sent back to his master with an epistle,
in which Julian expressed, in a strain of the most vehement eloquence, the sentiments of
contempt, of hatred, and of resentment, which had been suppressed and imbittered by the
dissimulation of twenty years. After this message, which might be considered as a signal of
irreconcilable war, Julian, who, some weeks before, had celebrated the Christian festival of the
Epiphany, made a public declaration that he committed the care of his safety to the Immortal
Gods; and thus publicly renounced the religion as well as the friendship of Constantius.
The situation of Julian required a vigorous and immediate resolution. He had discovered, from
intercepted letters, that his adversary, sacrificing the interest of the state to that of the monarch,
had again excited the Barbarians to invade the provinces of the West. The position of two
magazines, one of them collected on the banks of the Lake of Constance, the other formed at the
foot of the Cottian Alps, seemed to indicate the march of two armies; and the size of those
magazines, each of which consisted of six hundred thousand quarters of wheat, or rather flour,
was a threatening evidence of the strength and numbers of the enemy who prepared to surround
him. But the Imperial legions were still in their distant quarters of Asia; the Danube was feebly
guarded; and if Julian could occupy, by a sudden incursion, the important provinces of Illyricum,
he might expect that a people of soldiers would resort to his standard, and that the rich mines of
gold and silver would contribute to the expenses of the civil war. He proposed this bold
enterprise to the assembly of the soldiers; inspired them with a just confidence in their general,
and in themselves; and exhorted them to maintain their reputation of being terrible to the enemy,
moderate to their fellow-citizens, and obedient to their officers. His spirited discourse was
received with the loudest acclamations, and the same troops which had taken up arms against
Constantius, when he summoned them to leave Gaul, now declared with alacrity, that they
would follow Julian to the farthest extremities of Europe or Asia. The oath of fidelity was
administered; and the soldiers, clashing their shields, and pointing their drawn swords to their
throats, devoted themselves, with horrid imprecations, to the service of a leader whom they
celebrated as the deliverer of Gaul and the conqueror of the Germans. This solemn engagement,
which seemed to be dictated by affection rather than by duty, was singly opposed by Nebridius,
who had been admitted to the office of Prætorian præfect. That faithful minister, alone and
unassisted, asserted the rights of Constantius, in the midst of an armed and angry multitude, to
whose fury he had almost fallen an honorable, but useless sacrifice. After losing one of his hands
by the stroke of a sword, he embraced the knees of the prince whom he had offended. Julian
covered the præfect with his Imperial mantle, and, protecting him from the zeal of his followers,
dismissed him to his own house, with less respect than was perhaps due to the virtue of an
enemy. The high office of Nebridius was bestowed on Sallust; and the provinces of Gaul, which
were now delivered from the intolerable oppression of taxes, enjoyed the mild and equitable
administration of the friend of Julian, who was permitted to practise those virtues which he had
instilled into the mind of his pupil.
The hopes of Julian depended much less on the number of his troops, than on the celerity of his
motions. In the execution of a daring enterprise, he availed himself of every precaution, as far as
prudence could suggest; and where prudence could no longer accompany his steps, he trusted the
event to valor and to fortune. In the neighborhood of Basil he assembled and divided his army.
One body, which consisted of ten thousand men, was directed under the command of Nevitta,
general of the cavalry, to advance through the midland parts of Rhætia and Noricum. A similar
division of troops, under the orders of Jovius and Jovinus, prepared to follow the oblique course
of the highways, through the Alps, and the northern confines of Italy. The instructions to the
generals were conceived with energy and precision: to hasten their march in close and compact
columns, which, according to the disposition of the ground, might readily be changed into any
order of battle; to secure themselves against the surprises of the night by strong posts and
vigilant guards; to prevent resistance by their unexpected arrival; to elude examination by their
sudden departure; to spread the opinion of their strength, and the terror of his name; and to join
their sovereign under the walls of Sirmium. For himself Julian had reserved a more difficult and
extraordinary part. He selected three thousand brave and active volunteers, resolved, like their
leader, to cast behind them every hope of a retreat; at the head of this faithful band, he fearlessly
plunged into the recesses of the Marcian, or Black Forest, which conceals the sources of the
Danube; and, for many days, the fate of Julian was unknown to the world. The secrecy of his
march, his diligence, and vigor, surmounted every obstacle; he forced his way over mountains
and morasses, occupied the bridges or swam the rivers, pursued his direct course, without
reflecting whether he traversed the territory of the Romans or of the Barbarians, and at length
emerged, between Ratisbon and Vienna, at the place where he designed to embark his troops on
the Danube. By a well-concerted stratagem, he seized a fleet of light brigantines, as it lay at
anchor; secured a apply of coarse provisions sufficient to satisfy the indelicate, and voracious,
appetite of a Gallic army; and boldly committed himself to the stream of the Danube. The labors
of the mariners, who plied their oars with incessant diligence, and the steady continuance of a
favorable wind, carried his fleet above seven hundred miles in eleven days; and he had already
disembarked his troops at Bononia, * only nineteen miles from Sirmium, before his enemies
could receive any certain intelligence that he had left the banks of the Rhine. In the course of
this long and rapid navigation, the mind of Julian was fixed on the object of his enterprise; and
though he accepted the deputations of some cities, which hastened to claim the merit of an early
submission, he passed before the hostile stations, which were placed along the river, without
indulging the temptation of signalizing a useless and ill-timed valor. The banks of the Danube
were crowded on either side with spectators, who gazed on the military pomp, anticipated the
importance of the event, and diffused through the adjacent country the fame of a young hero,
who advanced with more than mortal speed at the head of the innumerable forces of the West.
Lucilian, who, with the rank of general of the cavalry, commanded the military powers of
Illyricum, was alarmed and perplexed by the doubtful reports, which he could neither reject nor
believe. He had taken some slow and irresolute measures for the purpose of collecting his
troops, when he was surprised by Dagalaiphus, an active officer, whom Julian, as soon as he
landed at Bononia, had pushed forwards with some light infantry. The captive general, uncertain
of his life or death, was hastily thrown upon a horse, and conducted to the presence of Julian;
who kindly raised him from the ground, and dispelled the terror and amazement which seemed
to stupefy his faculties. But Lucilian had no sooner recovered his spirits, than he betrayed his
want of discretion, by presuming to admonish his conqueror that he had rashly ventured, with a
handful of men, to expose his person in the midst of his enemies. "Reserve for your master
Constantius these timid remonstrances," replied Julian, with a smile of contempt: "when I gave
you my purple to kiss, I received you not as a counsellor, but as a suppliant." Conscious that
success alone could justify his attempt, and that boldness only could command success, he
instantly advanced, at the head of three thousand soldiers, to attack the strongest and most
populous city of the Illyrian provinces. As he entered the long suburb of Sirmium, he was
received by the joyful acclamations of the army and people; who, crowned with flowers, and
holding lighted tapers in their hands, conducted their acknowledged sovereign to his Imperial
residence. Two days were devoted to the public joy, which was celebrated by the games of the
circus; but, early on the morning of the third day, Julian marched to occupy the narrow pass of
Succi, in the defiles of Mount Hæmus; which, almost in the midway between Sirmium and
Constantinople, separates the provinces of Thrace and Dacia, by an abrupt descent towards the
former, and a gentle declivity on the side of the latter. The defence of this important post was
intrusted to the brave Nevitta; who, as well as the generals of the Italian division, successfully
executed the plan of the march and junction which their master had so ably conceived.
The homage which Julian obtained, from the fears or the inclination of the people, extended far
beyond the immediate effect of his arms. The præfectures of Italy and Illyricum were
administered by Taurus and Florentius, who united that important office with the vain honors of
the consulship; and as those magistrates had retired with precipitation to the court of Asia,
Julian, who could not always restrain the levity of his temper, stigmatized their flight by adding,
in all the Acts of the Year, the epithet of fugitive to the names of the two consuls. The provinces
which had been deserted by their first magistrates acknowledged the authority of an emperor,
who, conciliating the qualities of a soldier with those of a philosopher, was equally admired in
the camps of the Danube and in the cities of Greece. From his palace, or, more properly, from
his head-quarters of Sirmium and Naissus, he distributed to the principal cities of the empire, a
labored apology for his own conduct; published the secret despatches of Constantius; and
solicited the judgment of mankind between two competitors, the one of whom had expelled, and
the other had invited, the Barbarians. Julian, whose mind was deeply wounded by the reproach
of ingratitude, aspired to maintain, by argument as well as by arms, the superior merits of his
cause; and to excel, not only in the arts of war, but in those of composition. His epistle to the
senate and people of Athens seems to have been dictated by an elegant enthusiasm; which
prompted him to submit his actions and his motives to the degenerate Athenians of his own
times, with the same humble deference as if he had been pleading, in the days of Aristides,
before the tribunal of the Areopagus. His application to the senate of Rome, which was still
permitted to bestow the titles of Imperial power, was agreeable to the forms of the expiring
republic. An assembly was summoned by Tertullus, præfect of the city; the epistle of Julian was
read; and, as he appeared to be master of Italy his claims were admitted without a dissenting
voice. His oblique censure of the innovations of Constantine, and his passionate invective
against the vices of Constantius, were heard with less satisfaction; and the senate, as if Julian
had been present, unanimously exclaimed, "Respect, we beseech you, the author of your own
fortune." An artful expression, which, according to the chance of war, might be differently
explained; as a manly reproof of the ingratitude of the usurper, or as a flattering confession, that
a single act of such benefit to the state ought to atone for all the failings of Constantius.
The intelligence of the march and rapid progress of Julian was speedily transmitted to his rival,
who, by the retreat of Sapor, had obtained some respite from the Persian war. Disguising the
anguish of his soul under the semblance of contempt, Constantius professed his intention of
returning into Europe, and of giving chase to Julian; for he never spoke of his military
expedition in any other light than that of a hunting party. In the camp of Hierapolis, in Syria, he
communicated this design to his army; slightly mentioned the guilt and rashness of the Cæsar;
and ventured to assure them, that if the mutineers of Gaul presumed to meet them in the field,
they would be unable to sustain the fire of their eyes, and the irresistible weight of their shout of
onset. The speech of the emperor was received with military applause, and Theodotus, the
president of the council of Hierapolis, requested, with tears of adulation, that his city might be
adorned with the head of the vanquished rebel. A chosen detachment was despatched away in
post-wagons, to secure, if it were yet possible, the pass of Succi; the recruits, the horses, the
arms, and the magazines, which had been prepared against Sapor, were appropriated to the
service of the civil war; and the domestic victories of Constantius inspired his partisans with the
most sanguine assurances of success. The notary Gaudentius had occupied in his name the
provinces of Africa; the subsistence of Rome was intercepted; and the distress of Julian was
increased by an unexpected event, which might have been productive of fatal consequences.
Julian had received the submission of two legions and a cohort of archers, who were stationed at
Sirmium; but he suspected, with reason, the fidelity of those troops which had been
distinguished by the emperor; and it was thought expedient, under the pretence of the exposed
state of the Gallic frontier, to dismiss them from the most important scene of action. They
advanced, with reluctance, as far as the confines of Italy; but as they dreaded the length of the
way, and the savage fierceness of the Germans, they resolved, by the instigation of one of their
tribunes, to halt at Aquileia, and to erect the banners of Constantius on the walls of that
impregnable city. The vigilance of Julian perceived at once the extent of the mischief, and the
necessity of applying an immediate remedy. By his order, Jovinus led back a part of the army
into Italy; and the siege of Aquileia was formed with diligence, and prosecuted with vigor. But
the legionaries, who seemed to have rejected the yoke of discipline, conducted the defence of the
place with skill and perseverance; invited the rest of Italy to imitate the example of their courage
and loyalty; and threatened the retreat of Julian, if he should be forced to yield to the superior
numbers of the armies of the East.
But the humanity of Julian was preserved from the cruel alternative which he pathetically
laments, of destroying or of being himself destroyed: and the seasonable death of Constantius
delivered the Roman empire from the calamities of civil war. The approach of winter could not
detain the monarch at Antioch; and his favorites durst not oppose his impatient desire of
revenge. A slight fever, which was perhaps occasioned by the agitation of his spirits, was
increased by the fatigues of the journey; and Constantius was obliged to halt at the little town of
Mopsucrene, twelve miles beyond Tarsus, where he expired, after a short illness, in the
forty-fifth year of his age, and the twenty-fourth of his reign. His genuine character, which was
composed of pride and weakness, of superstition and cruelty, has been fully displayed in the
preceding narrative of civil and ecclesiastical events. The long abuse of power rendered him a
considerable object in the eyes of his contemporaries; but as personal merit can alone deserve
the notice of posterity, the last of the sons of Constantine may be dismissed from the world, with
the remark, that he inherited the defects, without the abilities, of his father. Before Constantius
expired, he is said to have named Julian for his successor; nor does it seem improbable, that his
anxious concern for the fate of a young and tender wife, whom he left with child, may have
prevailed, in his last moments, over the harsher passions of hatred and revenge. Eusebius, and
his guilty associates, made a faint attempt to prolong the reign of the eunuchs, by the election of
another emperor; but their intrigues were rejected with disdain, by an army which now abhorred
the thought of civil discord; and two officers of rank were instantly despatched, to assure Julian,
that every sword in the empire would be drawn for his service. The military designs of that
prince, who had formed three different attacks against Thrace, were prevented by this fortunate
event. Without shedding the blood of his fellow-citizens, he escaped the dangers of a doubtful
conflict, and acquired the advantages of a complete victory. Impatient to visit the place of his
birth, and the new capital of the empire, he advanced from Naissus through the mountains of
Hæmus, and the cities of Thrace. When he reached Heraclea, at the distance of sixty miles, all
Constantinople was poured forth to receive him; and he made his triumphal entry amidst the
dutiful acclamations of the soldiers, the people, and the senate. At innumerable multitude
pressed around him with eager respect and were perhaps disappointed when they beheld the
small stature and simple garb of a hero, whose unexperienced youth had vanquished the
Barbarians of Germany, and who had now traversed, in a successful career, the whole continent
of Europe, from the shores of the Atlantic to those of the Bosphorus. A few days afterwards,
when the remains of the deceased emperor were landed in the harbor, the subjects of Julian
applauded the real or affected humanity of their sovereign. On foot, without his diadem, and
clothed in a mourning habit, he accompanied the funeral as far as the church of the Holy
Apostles, where the body was deposited: and if these marks of respect may be interpreted as a
selfish tribute to the birth and dignity of his Imperial kinsman, the tears of Julian professed to
the world that he had forgot the injuries, and remembered only the obligations, which he had
received from Constantius. As soon as the legions of Aquileia were assured of the death of the
emperor, they opened the gates of the city, and, by the sacrifice of their guilty leaders, obtained
an easy pardon from the prudence or lenity of Julian; who, in the thirty-second year of his age,
acquired the undisputed possession of the Roman empire.
Chapter XXII: Julian Declared Emperor. -- Part III.
Philosophy had instructed Julian to compare the advantages of action and retirement; but the
elevation of his birth, and the accidents of his life, never allowed him the freedom of choice. He
might perhaps sincerely have preferred the groves of the academy, and the society of Athens; but
he was constrained, at first by the will, and afterwards by the injustice, of Constantius, to expose
his person and fame to the dangers of Imperial greatness; and to make himself accountable to the
world, and to posterity, for the happiness of millions. Julian recollected with terror the
observation of his master Plato, that the government of our flocks and herds is always
committed to beings of a superior species; and that the conduct of nations requires and deserves
the celestial powers of the gods or of the genii. From this principle he justly concluded, that the
man who presumes to reign, should aspire to the perfection of the divine nature; that he should
purify his soul from her mortal and terrestrial part; that he should extinguish his appetites,
enlighten his understanding, regulate his passions, and subdue the wild beast, which, according
to the lively metaphor of Aristotle, seldom fails to ascend the throne of a despot. The throne of
Julian, which the death of Constantius fixed on an independent basis, was the seat of reason, of
virtue, and perhaps of vanity. He despised the honors, renounced the pleasures, and discharged
with incessant diligence the duties, of his exalted station; and there were few among his subjects
who would have consented to relieve him from the weight of the diadem, had they been obliged
to submit their time and their actions to the rigorous laws which that philosophic emperor
imposed on himself. One of his most intimate friends, who had often shared the frugal
simplicity of his table, has remarked, that his light and sparing diet (which was usually of the
vegetable kind) left his mind and body always free and active, for the various and important
business of an author, a pontiff, a magistrate, a general, and a prince. In one and the same day,
he gave audience to several ambassadors, and wrote, or dictated, a great number of letters to his
generals, his civil magistrates, his private friends, and the different cities of his dominions. He
listened to the memorials which had been received, considered the subject of the petitions, and
signified his intentions more rapidly than they could be taken in short-hand by the diligence of
his secretaries. He possessed such flexibility of thought, and such firmness of attention, that he
could employ his hand to write, his ear to listen, and his voice to dictate; and pursue at once
three several trains of ideas without hesitation, and without error. While his ministers reposed,
the prince flew with agility from one labor to another, and, after a hasty dinner, retired into his
library, till the public business, which he had appointed for the evening, summoned him to
interrupt the prosecution of his studies. The supper of the emperor was still less substantial than
the former meal; his sleep was never clouded by the fumes of indigestion; and except in the
short interval of a marriage, which was the effect of policy rather than love, the chaste Julian
never shared his bed with a female companion. He was soon awakened by the entrance of fresh
secretaries, who had slept the preceding day; and his servants were obliged to wait alternately
while their indefatigable master allowed himself scarcely any other refreshment than the change
of occupation. The predecessors of Julian, his uncle, his brother, and his cousin, indulged their
puerile taste for the games of the Circus, under the specious pretence of complying with the
inclinations of the people; and they frequently remained the greatest part of the day as idle
spectators, and as a part of the splendid spectacle, till the ordinary round of twenty-four races
was completely finished. On solemn festivals, Julian, who felt and professed an unfashionable
dislike to these frivolous amusements, condescended to appear in the Circus; and after
bestowing a careless glance at five or six of the races, he hastily withdrew with the impatience of
a philosopher, who considered every moment as lost that was not devoted to the advantage of the
public or the improvement of his own mind. By this avarice of time, he seemed to protract the
short duration of his reign; and if the dates were less securely ascertained, we should refuse to
believe, that only sixteen months elapsed between the death of Constantius and the departure of
his successor for the Persian war. The actions of Julian can only be preserved by the care of the
historian; but the portion of his voluminous writings, which is still extant, remains as a
monument of the application, as well as of the genius, of the emperor. The Misopogon, the
Cæsars, several of his orations, and his elaborate work against the Christian religion, were
composed in the long nights of the two winters, the former of which he passed at
Constantinople, and the latter at Antioch.
The reformation of the Imperial court was one of the first and most necessary acts of the
government of Julian. Soon after his entrance into the palace of Constantinople, he had
occasion for the service of a barber. An officer, magnificently dressed, immediately presented
himself. "It is a barber," exclaimed the prince, with affected surprise, "that I want, and not a
receiver-general of the finances." He questioned the man concerning the profits of his
employment and was informed, that besides a large salary, and some valuable perquisites, he
enjoyed a daily allowance for twenty servants, and as many horses. A thousand barbers, a
thousand cup-bearers, a thousand cooks, were distributed in the several offices of luxury; and the
number of eunuchs could be compared only with the insects of a summer's day. The monarch
who resigned to his subjects the superiority of merit and virtue, was distinguished by the
oppressive magnificence of his dress, his table, his buildings, and his train. The stately palaces
erected by Constantine and his sons, were decorated with many colored marbles, and ornaments
of massy gold. The most exquisite dainties were procured, to gratify their pride, rather than their
taste; birds of the most distant climates, fish from the most remote seas, fruits out of their
natural season, winter roses, and summer snows. The domestic crowd of the palace surpassed
the expense of the legions; yet the smallest part of this costly multitude was subservient to the
use, or even to the splendor, of the throne. The monarch was disgraced, and the people was
injured, by the creation and sale of an infinite number of obscure, and even titular employments;
and the most worthless of mankind might purchase the privilege of being maintained, without
the necessity of labor, from the public revenue. The waste of an enormous household, the
increase of fees and perquisites, which were soon claimed as a lawful debt, and the bribes which
they extorted from those who feared their enmity, or solicited their favor, suddenly enriched
these haughty menials. They abused their fortune, without considering their past, or their future,
condition; and their rapine and venality could be equalled only by the extravagance of their
dissipations. Their silken robes were embroidered with gold, their tables were served with
delicacy and profusion; the houses which they built for their own use, would have covered the
farm of an ancient consul; and the most honorable citizens were obliged to dismount from their
horses, and respectfully to salute a eunuch whom they met on the public highway. The luxury of
the palace excited the contempt and indignation of Julian, who usually slept on the ground, who
yielded with reluctance to the indispensable calls of nature; and who placed his vanity, not in
emulating, but in despising, the pomp of royalty.
By the total extirpation of a mischief which was magnified even beyond its real extent, he was
impatient to relieve the distress, and to appease the murmurs of the people; who support with
less uneasiness the weight of taxes, if they are convinced that the fruits of their industry are
appropriated to the service of the state. But in the execution of this salutary work, Julian is
accused of proceeding with too much haste and inconsiderate severity. By a single edict, he
reduced the palace of Constantinople to an immense desert, and dismissed with ignominy the
whole train of slaves and dependants, without providing any just, or at least benevolent,
exceptions, for the age, the services, or the poverty, of the faithful domestics of the Imperial
family. Such indeed was the temper of Julian, who seldom recollected the fundamental maxim
of Aristotle, that true virtue is placed at an equal distance between the opposite vices. The
splendid and effeminate dress of the Asiatics, the curls and paint, the collars and bracelets,
which had appeared so ridiculous in the person of Constantine, were consistently rejected by his
philosophic successor. But with the fopperies, Julian affected to renounce the decencies of dress;
and seemed to value himself for his neglect of the laws of cleanliness. In a satirical performance,
which was designed for the public eye, the emperor descants with pleasure, and even with pride,
on the length of his nails, and the inky blackness of his hands; protests, that although the greatest
part of his body was covered with hair, the use of the razor was confined to his head alone; and
celebrates, with visible complacency, the shaggy and populous beard, which he fondly
cherished, after the example of the philosophers of Greece. Had Julian consulted the simple
dictates of reason, the first magistrate of the Romans would have scorned the affectation of
Diogenes, as well as that of Darius.
But the work of public reformation would have remained imperfect, if Julian had only corrected
the abuses, without punishing the crimes, of his predecessor's reign. "We are now delivered,"
says he, in a familiar letter to one of his intimate friends, "we are now surprisingly delivered
from the voracious jaws of the Hydra. I do not mean to apply the epithet to my brother
Constantius. He is no more; may the earth lie light on his head! But his artful and cruel favorites
studied to deceive and exasperate a prince, whose natural mildness cannot be praised without
some efforts of adulation. It is not, however, my intention, that even those men should be
oppressed: they are accused, and they shall enjoy the benefit of a fair and impartial trial." To
conduct this inquiry, Julian named six judges of the highest rank in the state and army; and as he
wished to escape the reproach of condemning his personal enemies, he fixed this extraordinary
tribunal at Chalcedon, on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus; and transferred to the
commissioners an absolute power to pronounce and execute their final sentence, without delay,
and without appeal. The office of president was exercised by the venerable præfect of the East, a
second Sallust, whose virtues conciliated the esteem of Greek sophists, and of Christian
bishops. He was assisted by the eloquent Mamertinus, one of the consuls elect, whose merit is
loudly celebrated by the doubtful evidence of his own applause. But the civil wisdom of two
magistrates was overbalanced by the ferocious violence of four generals, Nevitta, Agilo, Jovinus,
and Arbetio. Arbetio, whom the public would have seen with less surprise at the bar than on the
bench, was supposed to possess the secret of the commission; the armed and angry leaders of the
Jovian and Herculian bands encompassed the tribunal; and the judges were alternately swayed
by the laws of justice, and by the clamors of faction.
The chamberlain Eusebius, who had so long abused the favor of Constantius, expiated, by an
ignominious death, the insolence, the corruption, and cruelty of his servile reign. The executions
of Paul and Apodemius (the former of whom was burnt alive) were accepted as an inadequate
atonement by the widows and orphans of so many hundred Romans, whom those legal tyrants
had betrayed and murdered. But justice herself (if we may use the pathetic expression of
Ammianus ) appeared to weep over the fate of Ursulus, the treasurer of the empire; and his
blood accused the ingratitude of Julian, whose distress had been seasonably relieved by the
intrepid liberality of that honest minister. The rage of the soldiers, whom he had provoked by his
indiscretion, was the cause and the excuse of his death; and the emperor, deeply wounded by his
own reproaches and those of the public, offered some consolation to the family of Ursulus, by
the restitution of his confiscated fortunes. Before the end of the year in which they had been
adorned with the ensigns of the prefecture and consulship, Taurus and Florentius were reduced
to implore the clemency of the inexorable tribunal of Chalcedon. The former was banished to
Vercellæ in Italy, and a sentence of death was pronounced against the latter. A wise prince
should have rewarded the crime of Taurus: the faithful minister, when he was no longer able to
oppose the progress of a rebel, had taken refuge in the court of his benefactor and his lawful
sovereign. But the guilt of Florentius justified the severity of the judges; and his escape served to
display the magnanimity of Julian, who nobly checked the interested diligence of an informer,
and refused to learn what place concealed the wretched fugitive from his just resentment. Some
months after the tribunal of Chalcedon had been dissolved, the prætorian vicegerent of Africa,
the notary Gaudentius, and Artemius duke of Egypt, were executed at Antioch. Artemius had
reigned the cruel and corrupt tyrant of a great province; Gaudentius had long practised the arts of
calumny against the innocent, the virtuous, and even the person of Julian himself. Yet the
circumstances of their trial and condemnation were so unskillfully managed, that these wicked
men obtained, in the public opinion, the glory of suffering for the obstinate loyalty with which
they had supported the cause of Constantius. The rest of his servants were protected by a general
act of oblivion; and they were left to enjoy with impunity the bribes which they had accepted,
either to defend the oppressed, or to oppress the friendless. This measure, which, on the soundest
principles of policy, may deserve our approbation, was executed in a manner which seemed to
degrade the majesty of the throne. Julian was tormented by the importunities of a multitude,
particularly of Egyptians, who loudly redemanded the gifts which they had imprudently or
illegally bestowed; he foresaw the endless prosecution of vexatious suits; and he engaged a
promise, which ought always to have been sacred, that if they would repair to Chalcedon, he
would meet them in person, to hear and determine their complaints. But as soon as they were
landed, he issued an absolute order, which prohibited the watermen from transporting any
Egyptian to Constantinople; and thus detained his disappointed clients on the Asiatic shore till,
their patience and money being utterly exhausted, they were obliged to return with indignant
murmurs to their native country.
Chapter XXII: Julian Declared Emperor. -- Part IV.
The numerous army of spies, of agents, and informers enlisted by Constantius to secure the
repose of one man, and to interrupt that of millions, was immediately disbanded by his generous
successor. Julian was slow in his suspicions, and gentle in his punishments; and his contempt of
treason was the result of judgment, of vanity, and of courage. Conscious of superior merit, he
was persuaded that few among his subjects would dare to meet him in the field, to attempt his
life, or even to seat themselves on his vacant throne. The philosopher could excuse the hasty
sallies of discontent; and the hero could despise the ambitious projects which surpassed the
fortune or the abilities of the rash conspirators. A citizen of Ancyra had prepared for his own use
a purple garment; and this indiscreet action, which, under the reign of Constantius, would have
been considered as a capital offence, was reported to Julian by the officious importunity of a
private enemy. The monarch, after making some inquiry into the rank and character of his rival,
despatched the informer with a present of a pair of purple slippers, to complete the magnificence
of his Imperial habit. A more dangerous conspiracy was formed by ten of the domestic guards,
who had resolved to assassinate Julian in the field of exercise near Antioch. Their intemperance
revealed their guilt; and they were conducted in chains to the presence of their injured sovereign,
who, after a lively representation of the wickedness and folly of their enterprise, instead of a
death of torture, which they deserved and expected, pronounced a sentence of exile against the
two principal offenders. The only instance in which Julian seemed to depart from his
accustomed clemency, was the execution of a rash youth, who, with a feeble hand, had aspired
to seize the reins of empire. But that youth was the son of Marcellus, the general of cavalry,
who, in the first campaign of the Gallic war, had deserted the standard of the Cæsar and the
republic. Without appearing to indulge his personal resentment, Julian might easily confound the
crime of the son and of the father; but he was reconciled by the distress of Marcellus, and the
liberality of the emperor endeavored to heal the wound which had been inflicted by the hand of
justice.
Julian was not insensible of the advantages of freedom. From his studies he had imbibed the
spirit of ancient sages and heroes; his life and fortunes had depended on the caprice of a tyrant;
and when he ascended the throne, his pride was sometimes mortified by the reflection, that the
slaves who would not dare to censure his defects were not worthy to applaud his virtues. He
sincerely abhorred the system of Oriental despotism, which Diocletian, Constantine, and the
patient habits of fourscore years, had established in the empire. A motive of superstition
prevented the execution of the design, which Julian had frequently meditated, of relieving his
head from the weight of a costly diadem; but he absolutely refused the title of Dominus, or
Lord, a word which was grown so familiar to the ears of the Romans, that they no longer
remembered its servile and humiliating origin. The office, or rather the name, of consul, was
cherished by a prince who contemplated with reverence the ruins of the republic; and the same
behavior which had been assumed by the prudence of Augustus was adopted by Julian from
choice and inclination. On the calends of January, at break of day, the new consuls, Mamertinus
and Nevitta, hastened to the palace to salute the emperor. As soon as he was informed of their
approach, he leaped from his throne, eagerly advanced to meet them, and compelled the
blushing magistrates to receive the demonstrations of his affected humility. From the palace they
proceeded to the senate. The emperor, on foot, marched before their litters; and the gazing
multitude admired the image of ancient times, or secretly blamed a conduct, which, in their eyes,
degraded the majesty of the purple. But the behavior of Julian was uniformly supported. During
the games of the Circus, he had, imprudently or designedly, performed the manumission of a
slave in the presence of the consul. The moment he was reminded that he had trespassed on the
jurisdiction of another magistrate, he condemned himself to pay a fine of ten pounds of gold;
and embraced this public occasion of declaring to the world, that he was subject, like the rest of
his fellow-citizens, to the laws, and even to the forms, of the republic. The spirit of his
administration, and his regard for the place of his nativity, induced Julian to confer on the senate
of Constantinople the same honors, privileges, and authority, which were still enjoyed by the
senate of ancient Rome. A legal fiction was introduced, and gradually established, that one half
of the national council had migrated into the East; and the despotic successors of Julian,
accepting the title of Senators, acknowledged themselves the members of a respectable body,
which was permitted to represent the majesty of the Roman name. From Constantinople, the
attention of the monarch was extended to the municipal senates of the provinces. He abolished,
by repeated edicts, the unjust and pernicious exemptions which had withdrawn so many idle
citizens from the services of their country; and by imposing an equal distribution of public
duties, he restored the strength, the splendor, or, according to the glowing expression of
Libanius, the soul of the expiring cities of his empire. The venerable age of Greece excited the
most tender compassion in the mind of Julian, which kindled into rapture when he recollected
the gods, the heroes, and the men superior to heroes and to gods, who have bequeathed to the
latest posterity the monuments of their genius, or the example of their virtues. He relieved the
distress, and restored the beauty, of the cities of Epirus and Peloponnesus. Athens
acknowledged him for her benefactor; Argos, for her deliverer. The pride of Corinth, again
rising from her ruins with the honors of a Roman colony, exacted a tribute from the adjacent
republics, for the purpose of defraying the games of the Isthmus, which were celebrated in the
amphitheatre with the hunting of bears and panthers. From this tribute the cities of Elis, of
Delphi, and of Argos, which had inherited from their remote ancestors the sacred office of
perpetuating the Olympic, the Pythian, and the Nemean games, claimed a just exemption. The
immunity of Elis and Delphi was respected by the Corinthians; but the poverty of Argos tempted
the insolence of oppression; and the feeble complaints of its deputies were silenced by the
decree of a provincial magistrate, who seems to have consulted only the interest of the capital in
which he resided. Seven years after this sentence, Julian allowed the cause to be referred to a
superior tribunal; and his eloquence was interposed, most probably with success, in the defence
of a city, which had been the royal seat of Agamemnon, and had given to Macedonia a race of
kings and conquerors.
The laborious administration of military and civil affairs, which were multiplied in proportion to
the extent of the empire, exercised the abilities of Julian; but he frequently assumed the two
characters of Orator and of Judge, which are almost unknown to the modern sovereigns of
Europe. The arts of persuasion, so diligently cultivated by the first Cæsars, were neglected by the
military ignorance and Asiatic pride of their successors; and if they condescended to harangue
the soldiers, whom they feared, they treated with silent disdain the senators, whom they
despised. The assemblies of the senate, which Constantius had avoided, were considered by
Julian as the place where he could exhibit, with the most propriety, the maxims of a republican,
and the talents of a rhetorician. He alternately practised, as in a school of declamation, the
several modes of praise, of censure, of exhortation; and his friend Libanius has remarked, that
the study of Homer taught him to imitate the simple, concise style of Menelaus, the copiousness
of Nestor, whose words descended like the flakes of a winter's snow, or the pathetic and forcible
eloquence of Ulysses. The functions of a judge, which are sometimes incompatible with those of
a prince, were exercised by Julian, not only as a duty, but as an amusement; and although he
might have trusted the integrity and discernment of his Prætorian præfects, he often placed
himself by their side on the seat of judgment. The acute penetration of his mind was agreeably
occupied in detecting and defeating the chicanery of the advocates, who labored to disguise the
truths of facts, and to pervert the sense of the laws. He sometimes forgot the gravity of his
station, asked indiscreet or unseasonable questions, and betrayed, by the loudness of his voice,
and the agitation of his body, the earnest vehemence with which he maintained his opinion
against the judges, the advocates, and their clients. But his knowledge of his own temper
prompted him to encourage, and even to solicit, the reproof of his friends and ministers; and
whenever they ventured to oppose the irregular sallies of his passions, the spectators could
observe the shame, as well as the gratitude, of their monarch. The decrees of Julian were almost
always founded on the principles of justice; and he had the firmness to resist the two most
dangerous temptations, which assault the tribunal of a sovereign, under the specious forms of
compassion and equity. He decided the merits of the cause without weighing the circumstances
of the parties; and the poor, whom he wished to relieve, were condemned to satisfy the just
demands of a wealthy and noble adversary. He carefully distinguished the judge from the
legislator; and though he meditated a necessary reformation of the Roman jurisprudence, he
pronounced sentence according to the strict and literal interpretation of those laws, which the
magistrates were bound to execute, and the subjects to obey.
The generality of princes, if they were stripped of their purple, and cast naked into the world,
would immediately sink to the lowest rank of society, without a hope of emerging from their
obscurity. But the personal merit of Julian was, in some measure, independent of his fortune.
Whatever had been his choice of life, by the force of intrepid courage, lively wit, and intense
application, he would have obtained, or at least he would have deserved, the highest honors of
his profession; and Julian might have raised himself to the rank of minister, or general, of the
state in which he was born a private citizen. If the jealous caprice of power had disappointed his
expectations, if he had prudently declined the paths of greatness, the employment of the same
talents in studious solitude would have placed beyond the reach of kings his present happiness
and his immortal fame. When we inspect, with minute, or perhaps malevolent attention, the
portrait of Julian, something seems wanting to the grace and perfection of the whole figure. His
genius was less powerful and sublime than that of Cæsar; nor did he possess the consummate
prudence of Augustus. The virtues of Trajan appear more steady and natural, and the philosophy
of Marcus is more simple and consistent. Yet Julian sustained adversity with firmness, and
prosperity with moderation. After an interval of one hundred and twenty years from the death of
Alexander Severus, the Romans beheld an emperor who made no distinction between his duties
and his pleasures; who labored to relieve the distress, and to revive the spirit, of his subjects; and
who endeavored always to connect authority with merit, and happiness with virtue. Even faction,
and religious faction, was constrained to acknowledge the superiority of his genius, in peace as
well as in war, and to confess, with a sigh, that the apostate Julian was a lover of his country,
and that he deserved the empire of the world.
Chapter XXIII: Reign Of Julian.
Part I.
The Religion Of Julian. -- Universal Toleration. -- He Attempts To Restore And Reform The
Pagan Worship -- To Rebuild The Temple Of Jerusalem -- His Artful Persecution Of The
Christians. -- Mutual Zeal And Injustice.
The character of Apostate has injured the reputation of Julian; and the enthusiasm which
clouded his virtues has exaggerated the real and apparent magnitude of his faults. Our partial
ignorance may represent him as a philosophic monarch, who studied to protect, with an equal
hand, the religious factions of the empire; and to allay the theological fever which had inflamed
the minds of the people, from the edicts of Diocletian to the exile of Athanasius. A more
accurate view of the character and conduct of Julian will remove this favorable prepossession
for a prince who did not escape the general contagion of the times. We enjoy the singular
advantage of comparing the pictures which have been delineated by his fondest admirers and his
implacable enemies. The actions of Julian are faithfully related by a judicious and candid
historian, the impartial spectator of his life and death. The unanimous evidence of his
contemporaries is confirmed by the public and private declarations of the emperor himself; and
his various writings express the uniform tenor of his religious sentiments, which policy would
have prompted him to dissemble rather than to affect. A devout and sincere attachment for the
gods of Athens and Rome constituted the ruling passion of Julian; the powers of an enlightened
understanding were betrayed and corrupted by the influence of superstitious prejudice; and the
phantoms which existed only in the mind of the emperor had a real and pernicious effect on the
government of the empire. The vehement zeal of the Christians, who despised the worship, and
overturned the altars of those fabulous deities, engaged their votary in a state of irreconcilable
hostility with a very numerous party of his subjects; and he was sometimes tempted by the desire
of victory, or the shame of a repulse, to violate the laws of prudence, and even of justice. The
triumph of the party, which he deserted and opposed, has fixed a stain of infamy on the name of
Julian; and the unsuccessful apostate has been overwhelmed with a torrent of pious invectives,
of which the signal was given by the sonorous trumpet of Gregory Nazianzen. The interesting
nature of the events which were crowded into the short reign of this active emperor, deserve a
just and circumstantial narrative. His motives, his counsels, and his actions, as far as they are
connected with the history of religion, will be the subject of the present chapter.
The cause of his strange and fatal apostasy may be derived from the early period of his life,
when he was left an orphan in the hands of the murderers of his family. The names of Christ and
of Constantius, the ideas of slavery and of religion, were soon associated in a youthful
imagination, which was susceptible of the most lively impressions. The care of his infancy was
intrusted to Eusebius, bishop of Nicomedia, who was related to him on the side of his mother;
and till Julian reached the twentieth year of his age, he received from his Christian preceptors
the education, not of a hero, but of a saint. The emperor, less jealous of a heavenly than of an
earthly crown, contented himself with the imperfect character of a catechumen, while he
bestowed the advantages of baptism on the nephews of Constantine. They were even admitted
to the inferior offices of the ecclesiastical order; and Julian publicly read the Holy Scriptures in
the church of Nicomedia. The study of religion, which they assiduously cultivated, appeared to
produce the fairest fruits of faith and devotion. They prayed, they fasted, they distributed alms
to the poor, gifts to the clergy, and oblations to the tombs of the martyrs; and the splendid
monument of St. Mamas, at Cæsarea, was erected, or at least was undertaken, by the joint labor
of Gallus and Julian. They respectfully conversed with the bishops, who were eminent for
superior sanctity, and solicited the benediction of the monks and hermits, who had introduced
into Cappadocia the voluntary hardships of the ascetic life. As the two princes advanced
towards the years of manhood, they discovered, in their religious sentiments, the difference of
their characters. The dull and obstinate understanding of Gallus embraced, with implicit zeal,
the doctrines of Christianity; which never influenced his conduct, or moderated his passions.
The mild disposition of the younger brother was less repugnant to the precepts of the gospel; and
his active curiosity might have been gratified by a theological system, which explains the
mysterious essence of the Deity, and opens the boundless prospect of invisible and future
worlds. But the independent spirit of Julian refused to yield the passive and unresisting
obedience which was required, in the name of religion, by the haughty ministers of the church.
Their speculative opinions were imposed as positive laws, and guarded by the terrors of eternal
punishments; but while they prescribed the rigid formulary of the thoughts, the words, and the
actions of the young prince; whilst they silenced his objections, and severely checked the
freedom of his inquiries, they secretly provoked his impatient genius to disclaim the authority of
his ecclesiastical guides. He was educated in the Lesser Asia, amidst the scandals of the Arian
controversy. The fierce contests of the Eastern bishops, the incessant alterations of their creeds,
and the profane motives which appeared to actuate their conduct, insensibly strengthened the
prejudice of Julian, that they neither understood nor believed the religion for which they so
fiercely contended. Instead of listening to the proofs of Christianity with that favorable attention
which adds weight to the most respectable evidence, he heard with suspicion, and disputed with
obstinacy and acuteness, the doctrines for which he already entertained an invincible aversion.
Whenever the young princes were directed to compose declamations on the subject of the
prevailing controversies, Julian always declared himself the advocate of Paganism; under the
specious excuse that, in the defence of the weaker cause, his learning and ingenuity might be
more advantageously exercised and displayed.
As soon as Gallus was invested with the honors of the purple, Julian was permitted to breathe
the air of freedom, of literature, and of Paganism. The crowd of sophists, who were attracted by
the taste and liberality of their royal pupil, had formed a strict alliance between the learning and
the religion of Greece; and the poems of Homer, instead of being admired as the original
productions of human genius, were seriously ascribed to the heavenly inspiration of Apollo and
the muses. The deities of Olympus, as they are painted by the immortal bard, imprint themselves
on the minds which are the least addicted to superstitious credulity. Our familiar knowledge of
their names and characters, their forms and attributes, seems to bestow on those airy beings a
real and substantial existence; and the pleasing enchantment produces an imperfect and
momentary assent of the imagination to those fables, which are the most repugnant to our reason
and experience. In the age of Julian, every circumstance contributed to prolong and fortify the
illusion; the magnificent temples of Greece and Asia; the works of those artists who had
expressed, in painting or in sculpture, the divine conceptions of the poet; the pomp of festivals
and sacrifices; the successful arts of divination; the popular traditions of oracles and prodigies;
and the ancient practice of two thousand years. The weakness of polytheism was, in some
measure, excused by the moderation of its claims; and the devotion of the Pagans was not
incompatible with the most licentious scepticism. Instead of an indivisible and regular system,
which occupies the whole extent of the believing mind, the mythology of the Greeks was
composed of a thousand loose and flexible parts, and the servant of the gods was at liberty to
define the degree and measure of his religious faith. The creed which Julian adopted for his own
use was of the largest dimensions; and, by strange contradiction, he disdained the salutary yoke
of the gospel, whilst he made a voluntary offering of his reason on the altars of Jupiter and
Apollo. One of the orations of Julian is consecrated to the honor of Cybele, the mother of the
gods, who required from her effeminate priests the bloody sacrifice, so rashly performed by the
madness of the Phrygian boy. The pious emperor condescends to relate, without a blush, and
without a smile, the voyage of the goddess from the shores of Pergamus to the mouth of the
Tyber, and the stupendous miracle, which convinced the senate and people of Rome that the
lump of clay, which their ambassadors had transported over the seas, was endowed with life, and
sentiment, and divine power. For the truth of this prodigy he appeals to the public monuments
of the city; and censures, with some acrimony, the sickly and affected taste of those men, who
impertinently derided the sacred traditions of their ancestors.
But the devout philosopher, who sincerely embraced, and warmly encouraged, the superstition of
the people, reserved for himself the privilege of a liberal interpretation; and silently withdrew
from the foot of the altars into the sanctuary of the temple. The extravagance of the Grecian
mythology proclaimed, with a clear and audible voice, that the pious inquirer, instead of being
scandalized or satisfied with the literal sense, should diligently explore the occult wisdom,
which had been disguised, by the prudence of antiquity, under the mask of folly and of fable.
The philosophers of the Platonic school, Plotinus, Porphyry, and the divine Iamblichus, were
admired as the most skilful masters of this allegorical science, which labored to soften and
harmonize the deformed features of Paganism. Julian himself, who was directed in the
mysterious pursuit by Ædesius, the venerable successor of Iamblichus, aspired to the possession
of a treasure, which he esteemed, if we may credit his solemn asseverations, far above the
empire of the world. It was indeed a treasure, which derived its value only from opinion; and
every artist who flattered himself that he had extracted the precious ore from the surrounding
dross, claimed an equal right of stamping the name and figure the most agreeable to his peculiar
fancy. The fable of Atys and Cybele had been already explained by Porphyry; but his labors
served only to animate the pious industry of Julian, who invented and published his own allegory
of that ancient and mystic tale. This freedom of interpretation, which might gratify the pride of
the Platonists, exposed the vanity of their art. Without a tedious detail, the modern reader could
not form a just idea of the strange allusions, the forced etymologies, the solemn trifling, and the
impenetrable obscurity of these sages, who professed to reveal the system of the universe. As the
traditions of Pagan mythology were variously related, the sacred interpreters were at liberty to
select the most convenient circumstances; and as they translated an arbitrary cipher, they could
extract from any fable any sense which was adapted to their favorite system of religion and
philosophy. The lascivious form of a naked Venus was tortured into the discovery of some moral
precept, or some physical truth; and the castration of Atys explained the revolution of the sun
between the tropics, or the separation of the human soul from vice and error.
The theological system of Julian appears to have contained the sublime and important principles
of natural religion. But as the faith, which is not founded on revelation, must remain destitute of
any firm assurance, the disciple of Plato imprudently relapsed into the habits of vulgar
superstition; and the popular and philosophic notion of the Deity seems to have been confounded
in the practice, the writings, and even in the mind of Julian. The pious emperor acknowledged
and adored the Eternal Cause of the universe, to whom he ascribed all the perfections of an
infinite nature, invisible to the eyes and inaccessible to the understanding, of feeble mortals. The
Supreme God had created, or rather, in the Platonic language, had generated, the gradual
succession of dependent spirits, of gods, of dæmons, of heroes, and of men; and every being
which derived its existence immediately from the First Cause, received the inherent gift of
immortality. That so precious an advantage might be lavished upon unworthy objects, the
Creator had intrusted to the skill and power of the inferior gods the office of forming the human
body, and of arranging the beautiful harmony of the animal, the vegetable, and the mineral
kingdoms. To the conduct of these divine ministers he delegated the temporal government of
this lower world; but their imperfect administration is not exempt from discord or error. The
earth and its inhabitants are divided among them, and the characters of Mars or Minerva, of
Mercury or Venus, may be distinctly traced in the laws and manners of their peculiar votaries.
As long as our immortal souls are confined in a mortal prison, it is our interest, as well as our
duty, to solicit the favor, and to deprecate the wrath, of the powers of heaven; whose pride is
gratified by the devotion of mankind; and whose grosser parts may be supposed to derive some
nourishment from the fumes of sacrifice. The inferior gods might sometimes condescend to
animate the statues, and to inhabit the temples, which were dedicated to their honor. They might
occasionally visit the earth, but the heavens were the proper throne and symbol of their glory.
The invariable order of the sun, moon, and stars, was hastily admitted by Julian, as a proof of
their eternalduration; and their eternity was a sufficient evidence that they were the
workmanship, not of an inferior deity, but of the Omnipotent King. In the system of Platonists,
the visible was a type of the invisible world. The celestial bodies, as they were informed by a
divine spirit, might be considered as the objects the most worthy of religious worship. The Sun,
whose genial influence pervades and sustains the universe, justly claimed the adoration of
mankind, as the bright representative of the Logos, the lively, the rational, the beneficent image
of the intellectual Father.
In every age, the absence of genuine inspiration is supplied by the strong illusions of enthusiasm,
and the mimic arts of imposture. If, in the time of Julian, these arts had been practised only by
the pagan priests, for the support of an expiring cause, some indulgence might perhaps be
allowed to the interest and habits of the sacerdotal character. But it may appear a subject of
surprise and scandal, that the philosophers themselves should have contributed to abuse the
superstitious credulity of mankind, and that the Grecian mysteries should have been supported
by the magic or theurgy of the modern Platonists. They arrogantly pretended to control the order
of nature, to explore the secrets of futurity, to command the service of the inferior dæmons, to
enjoy the view and conversation of the superior gods, and by disengaging the soul from her
material bands, to reunite that immortal particle with the Infinite and Divine Spirit.
The devout and fearless curiosity of Julian tempted the philosophers with the hopes of an easy
conquest; which, from the situation of their young proselyte, might be productive of the most
important consequences. Julian imbibed the first rudiments of the Platonic doctrines from the
mouth of Ædesius, who had fixed at Pergamus his wandering and persecuted school. But as the
declining strength of that venerable sage was unequal to the ardor, the diligence, the rapid
conception of his pupil, two of his most learned disciples, Chrysanthes and Eusebius, supplied,
at his own desire, the place of their aged master. These philosophers seem to have prepared and
distributed their respective parts; and they artfully contrived, by dark hints and affected disputes,
to excite the impatient hopes of the aspirant, till they delivered him into the hands of their
associate, Maximus, the boldest and most skilful master of the Theurgic science. By his hands,
Julian was secretly initiated at Ephesus, in the twentieth year of his age. His residence at Athens
confirmed this unnatural alliance of philosophy and superstition. He obtained the privilege of a
solemn initiation into the mysteries of Eleusis, which, amidst the general decay of the Grecian
worship, still retained some vestiges of their primæval sanctity; and such was the zeal of Julian,
that he afterwards invited the Eleusinian pontiff to the court of Gaul, for the sole purpose of
consummating, by mystic rites and sacrifices, the great work of his sanctification. As these
ceremonies were performed in the depth of caverns, and in the silence of the night, and as the
inviolable secret of the mysteries was preserved by the discretion of the initiated, I shall not
presume to describe the horrid sounds, and fiery apparitions, which were presented to the senses,
or the imagination, of the credulous aspirant, till the visions of comfort and knowledge broke
upon him in a blaze of celestial light. In the caverns of Ephesus and Eleusis, the mind of Julian
was penetrated with sincere, deep, and unalterable enthusiasm; though he might sometimes
exhibit the vicissitudes of pious fraud and hypocrisy, which may be observed, or at least
suspected, in the characters of the most conscientious fanatics. From that moment he
consecrated his life to the service of the gods; and while the occupations of war, of government,
and of study, seemed to claim the whole measure of his time, a stated portion of the hours of the
night was invariably reserved for the exercise of private devotion. The temperance which
adorned the severe manners of the soldier and the philosopher was connected with some strict
and frivolous rules of religious abstinence; and it was in honor of Pan or Mercury, of Hecate or
Isis, that Julian, on particular days, denied himself the use of some particular food, which might
have been offensive to his tutelar deities. By these voluntary fasts, he prepared his senses and his
understanding for the frequent and familiar visits with which he was honored by the celestial
powers. Notwithstanding the modest silence of Julian himself, we may learn from his faithful
friend, the orator Libanius, that he lived in a perpetual intercourse with the gods and goddesses;
that they descended upon earth to enjoy the conversation of their favorite hero; that they gently
interrupted his slumbers by touching his hand or his hair; that they warned him of every
impending danger, and conducted him, by their infallible wisdom, in every action of his life; and
that he had acquired such an intimate knowledge of his heavenly guests, as readily to distinguish
the voice of Jupiter from that of Minerva, and the form of Apollo from the figure of Hercules.
These sleeping or waking visions, the ordinary effects of abstinence and fanaticism, would
almost degrade the emperor to the level of an Egyptian monk. But the useless lives of Antony or
Pachomius were consumed in these vain occupations. Julian could break from the dream of
superstition to arm himself for battle; and after vanquishing in the field the enemies of Rome, he
calmly retired into his tent, to dictate the wise and salutary laws of an empire, or to indulge his
genius in the elegant pursuits of literature and philosophy.
The important secret of the apostasy of Julian was intrusted to the fidelity of the initiated, with
whom he was united by the sacred ties of friendship and religion. The pleasing rumor was
cautiously circulated among the adherents of the ancient worship; and his future greatness
became the object of the hopes, the prayers, and the predictions of the Pagans, in every province
of the empire. From the zeal and virtues of their royal proselyte, they fondly expected the cure of
every evil, and the restoration of every blessing; and instead of disapproving of the ardor of their
pious wishes, Julian ingenuously confessed, that he was ambitious to attain a situation in which
he might be useful to his country and to his religion. But this religion was viewed with a hostile
eye by the successor of Constantine, whose capricious passions alternately saved and threatened
the life of Julian. The arts of magic and divination were strictly prohibited under a despotic
government, which condescended to fear them; and if the Pagans were reluctantly indulged in
the exercise of their superstition, the rank of Julian would have excepted him from the general
toleration. The apostate soon became the presumptive heir of the monarchy, and his death could
alone have appeased the just apprehensions of the Christians. But the young prince, who aspired
to the glory of a hero rather than of a martyr, consulted his safety by dissembling his religion;
and the easy temper of polytheism permitted him to join in the public worship of a sect which he
inwardly despised. Libanius has considered the hypocrisy of his friend as a subject, not of
censure, but of praise. "As the statues of the gods," says that orator, "which have been defiled
with filth, are again placed in a magnificent temple, so the beauty of truth was seated in the mind
of Julian, after it had been purified from the errors and follies of his education. His sentiments
were changed; but as it would have been dangerous to have avowed his sentiments, his conduct
still continued the same. Very different from the ass in Æsop, who disguised himself with a
lion's hide, our lion was obliged to conceal himself under the skin of an ass; and, while he
embraced the dictates of reason, to obey the laws of prudence and necessity." The dissimulation
of Julian lasted about ten years, from his secret initiation at Ephesus to the beginning of the civil
war; when he declared himself at once the implacable enemy of Christ and of Constantius. This
state of constraint might contribute to strengthen his devotion; and as soon as he had satisfied
the obligation of assisting, on solemn festivals, at the assemblies of the Christians, Julian
returned, with the impatience of a lover, to burn his free and voluntary incense on the domestic
chapels of Jupiter and Mercury. But as every act of dissimulation must be painful to an
ingenuous spirit, the profession of Christianity increased the aversion of Julian for a religion
which oppressed the freedom of his mind, and compelled him to hold a conduct repugnant to the
noblest attributes of human nature, sincerity and courage.
Chapter XXIII: Reign Of Julian. -- Part II.
The inclination of Julian might prefer the gods of Homer, and of the Scipios, to the new faith,
which his uncle had established in the Roman empire; and in which he himself had been
sanctified by the sacrament of baptism. But, as a philosopher, it was incumbent on him to justify
his dissent from Christianity, which was supported by the number of its converts, by the chain of
prophecy, the splendor of or miracles, and the weight of evidence. The elaborate work, which
he composed amidst the preparations of the Persian war, contained the substance of those
arguments which he had long revolved in his mind. Some fragments have been transcribed and
preserved, by his adversary, the vehement Cyril of Alexandria; and they exhibit a very singular
mixture of wit and learning, of sophistry and fanaticism. The elegance of the style and the rank
of the author, recommended his writings to the public attention; and in the impious list of the
enemies of Christianity, the celebrated name of Porphyry was effaced by the superior merit or
reputation of Julian. The minds of the faithful were either seduced, or scandalized, or alarmed;
and the pagans, who sometimes presumed to engage in the unequal dispute, derived, from the
popular work of their Imperial missionary, an inexhaustible supply of fallacious objections. But
in the assiduous prosecution of these theological studies, the emperor of the Romans imbibed
the illiberal prejudices and passions of a polemic divine. He contracted an irrevocable obligation
to maintain and propagate his religious opinions; and whilst he secretly applauded the strength
and dexterity with which he wielded the weapons of controversy, he was tempted to distrust the
sincerity, or to despise the understandings, of his antagonists, who could obstinately resist the
force of reason and eloquence.
The Christians, who beheld with horror and indignation the apostasy of Julian, had much more
to fear from his power than from his arguments. The pagans, who were conscious of his fervent
zeal, expected, perhaps with impatience, that the flames of persecution should be immediately
kindled against the enemies of the gods; and that the ingenious malice of Julian would invent
some cruel refinements of death and torture which had been unknown to the rude and
inexperienced fury of his predecessors. But the hopes, as well as the fears, of the religious
factions were apparently disappointed, by the prudent humanity of a prince, who was careful of
his own fame, of the public peace, and of the rights of mankind. Instructed by history and
reflection, Julian was persuaded, that if the diseases of the body may sometimes be cured by
salutary violence, neither steel nor fire can eradicate the erroneous opinions of the mind. The
reluctant victim may be dragged to the foot of the altar; but the heart still abhors and disclaims
the sacrilegious act of the hand. Religious obstinacy is hardened and exasperated by oppression;
and, as soon as the persecution subsides, those who have yielded are restored as penitents, and
those who have resisted are honored as saints and martyrs. If Julian adopted the unsuccessful
cruelty of Diocletian and his colleagues, he was sensible that he should stain his memory with
the name of a tyrant, and add new glories to the Catholic church, which had derived strength and
increase from the severity of the pagan magistrates. Actuated by these motives, and apprehensive
of disturbing the repose of an unsettled reign, Julian surprised the world by an edict, which was
not unworthy of a statesman, or a philosopher. He extended to all the inhabitants of the Roman
world the benefits of a free and equal toleration; and the only hardship which he inflicted on the
Christians, was to deprive them of the power of tormenting their fellow-subjects, whom they
stigmatized with the odious titles of idolaters and heretics. The pagans received a gracious
permission, or rather an express order, to open All their temples; and they were at once
delivered from the oppressive laws, and arbitrary vexations, which they had sustained under the
reign of Constantine, and of his sons. At the same time the bishops and clergy, who had been
banished by the Arian monarch, were recalled from exile, and restored to their respective
churches; the Donatists, the Novatians, the Macedonians, the Eunomians, and those who, with a
more prosperous fortune, adhered to the doctrine of the Council of Nice. Julian, who understood
and derided their theological disputes, invited to the palace the leaders of the hostile sects, that
he might enjoy the agreeable spectacle of their furious encounters. The clamor of controversy
sometimes provoked the emperor to exclaim, "Hear me! the Franks have heard me, and the
Alemanni;" but he soon discovered that he was now engaged with more obstinate and
implacable enemies; and though he exerted the powers of oratory to persuade them to live in
concord, or at least in peace, he was perfectly satisfied, before he dismissed them from his
presence, that he had nothing to dread from the union of the Christians. The impartial Ammianus
has ascribed this affected clemency to the desire of fomenting the intestine divisions of the
church, and the insidious design of undermining the foundations of Christianity, was inseparably
connected with the zeal which Julian professed, to restore the ancient religion of the empire.
As soon as he ascended the throne, he assumed, according to the custom of his predecessors, the
character of supreme pontiff; not only as the most honorable title of Imperial greatness, but as a
sacred and important office; the duties of which he was resolved to execute with pious diligence.
As the business of the state prevented the emperor from joining every day in the public devotion
of his subjects, he dedicated a domestic chapel to his tutelar deity the Sun; his gardens were
filled with statues and altars of the gods; and each apartment of the palace displaced the
appearance of a magnificent temple. Every morning he saluted the parent of light with a
sacrifice; the blood of another victim was shed at the moment when the Sun sunk below the
horizon; and the Moon, the Stars, and the Genii of the night received their respective and
seasonable honors from the indefatigable devotion of Julian. On solemn festivals, he regularly
visited the temple of the god or goddess to whom the day was peculiarly consecrated, and
endeavored to excite the religion of the magistrates and people by the example of his own zeal.
Instead of maintaining the lofty state of a monarch, distinguished by the splendor of his purple,
and encompassed by the golden shields of his guards, Julian solicited, with respectful eagerness,
the meanest offices which contributed to the worship of the gods. Amidst the sacred but
licentious crowd of priests, of inferior ministers, and of female dancers, who were dedicated to
the service of the temple, it was the business of the emperor to bring the wood, to blow the fire,
to handle the knife, to slaughter the victim, and, thrusting his bloody hands into the bowels of
the expiring animal, to draw forth the heart or liver, and to read, with the consummate skill of an
haruspex, imaginary signs of future events. The wisest of the Pagans censured this extravagant
superstition, which affected to despise the restraints of prudence and decency. Under the reign of
a prince, who practised the rigid maxims of economy, the expense of religious worship
consumed a very large portion of the revenue a constant supply of the scarcest and most
beautiful birds was transported from distant climates, to bleed on the altars of the gods; a
hundred oxen were frequently sacrificed by Julian on one and the same day; and it soon became
a popular jest, that if he should return with conquest from the Persian war, the breed of horned
cattle must infallibly be extinguished. Yet this expense may appear inconsiderable, when it is
compared with the splendid presents which were offered either by the hand, or by order, of the
emperor, to all the celebrated places of devotion in the Roman world; and with the sums allotted
to repair and decorate the ancient temples, which had suffered the silent decay of time, or the
recent injuries of Christian rapine. Encouraged by the example, the exhortations, the liberality,
of their pious sovereign, the cities and families resumed the practice of their neglected
ceremonies. "Every part of the world," exclaims Libanius, with devout transport, "displayed the
triumph of religion; and the grateful prospect of flaming altars, bleeding victims, the smoke of
incense, and a solemn train of priests and prophets, without fear and without danger. The sound
of prayer and of music was heard on the tops of the highest mountains; and the same ox afforded
a sacrifice for the gods, and a supper for their joyous votaries."
But the genius and power of Julian were unequal to the enterprise of restoring a religion which
was destitute of theological principles, of moral precepts, and of ecclesiastical discipline; which
rapidly hastened to decay and dissolution, and was not susceptible of any solid or consistent
reformation. The jurisdiction of the supreme pontiff, more especially after that office had been
united with the Imperial dignity, comprehended the whole extent of the Roman empire. Julian
named for his vicars, in the several provinces, the priests and philosophers whom he esteemed
the best qualified to cooperate in the execution of his great design; and his pastoral letters, if we
may use that name, still represent a very curious sketch of his wishes and intentions. He directs,
that in every city the sacerdotal order should be composed, without any distinction of birth and
fortune, of those persons who were the most conspicuous for the love of the gods, and of men.
"If they are guilty," continues he, "of any scandalous offence, they should be censured or
degraded by the superior pontiff; but as long as they retain their rank, they are entitled to the
respect of the magistrates and people. Their humility may be shown in the plainness of their
domestic garb; their dignity, in the pomp of holy vestments. When they are summoned in their
turn to officiate before the altar, they ought not, during the appointed number of days, to depart
from the precincts of the temple; nor should a single day be suffered to elapse, without the
prayers and the sacrifice, which they are obliged to offer for the prosperity of the state, and of
individuals. The exercise of their sacred functions requires an immaculate purity, both of mind
and body; and even when they are dismissed from the temple to the occupations of common life,
it is incumbent on them to excel in decency and virtue the rest of their fellow-citizens. The priest
of the gods should never be seen in theatres or taverns. His conversation should be chaste, his
diet temperate, his friends of honorable reputation; and if he sometimes visits the Forum or the
Palace, he should appear only as the advocate of those who have vainly solicited either justice or
mercy. His studies should be suited to the sanctity of his profession. Licentious tales, or
comedies, or satires, must be banished from his library, which ought solely to consist of
historical or philosophical writings; of history, which is founded in truth, and of philosophy,
which is connected with religion. The impious opinions of the Epicureans and sceptics deserve
his abhorrence and contempt; but he should diligently study the systems of Pythagoras, of Plato,
and of the Stoics, which unanimously teach that there are gods; that the world is governed by
their providence; that their goodness is the source of every temporal blessing; and that they have
prepared for the human soul a future state of reward or punishment." The Imperial pontiff
inculcates, in the most persuasive language, the duties of benevolence and hospitality; exhorts
his inferior clergy to recommend the universal practice of those virtues; promises to assist their
indigence from the public treasury; and declares his resolution of establishing hospitals in every
city, where the poor should be received without any invidious distinction of country or of
religion. Julian beheld with envy the wise and humane regulations of the church; and he very
frankly confesses his intention to deprive the Christians of the applause, as well as advantage,
which they had acquired by the exclusive practice of charity and beneficence. The same spirit of
imitation might dispose the emperor to adopt several ecclesiastical institutions, the use and
importance of which were approved by the success of his enemies. But if these imaginary plans
of reformation had been realized, the forced and imperfect copy would have been less beneficial
to Paganism, than honorable to Christianity. The Gentiles, who peaceably followed the customs
of their ancestors, were rather surprised than pleased with the introduction of foreign manners;
and in the short period of his reign, Julian had frequent occasions to complain of the want of
fervor of his own party.
The enthusiasm of Julian prompted him to embrace the friends of Jupiter as his personal friends
and brethren; and though he partially overlooked the merit of Christian constancy, he admired
and rewarded the noble perseverance of those Gentiles who had preferred the favor of the gods
to that of the emperor. If they cultivated the literature, as well as the religion, of the Greeks,
they acquired an additional claim to the friendship of Julian, who ranked the Muses in the
number of his tutelar deities. In the religion which he had adopted, piety and learning were
almost synonymous; and a crowd of poets, of rhetoricians, and of philosophers, hastened to the
Imperial court, to occupy the vacant places of the bishops, who had seduced the credulity of
Constantius. His successor esteemed the ties of common initiation as far more sacred than those
of consanguinity; he chose his favorites among the sages, who were deeply skilled in the occult
sciences of magic and divination; and every impostor, who pretended to reveal the secrets of
futurity, was assured of enjoying the present hour in honor and affluence. Among the
philosophers, Maximus obtained the most eminent rank in the friendship of his royal disciple,
who communicated, with unreserved confidence, his actions, his sentiments, and his religious
designs, during the anxious suspense of the civil war. As soon as Julian had taken possession of
the palace of Constantinople, he despatched an honorable and pressing invitation to Maximus,
who then resided at Sardes in Lydia, with Chrysanthius, the associate of his art and studies. The
prudent and superstitious Chrysanthius refused to undertake a journey which showed itself,
according to the rules of divination, with the most threatening and malignant aspect: but his
companion, whose fanaticism was of a bolder cast, persisted in his interrogations, till he had
extorted from the gods a seeming consent to his own wishes, and those of the emperor. The
journey of Maximus through the cities of Asia displayed the triumph of philosophic vanity; and
the magistrates vied with each other in the honorable reception which they prepared for the
friend of their sovereign. Julian was pronouncing an oration before the senate, when he was
informed of the arrival of Maximus. The emperor immediately interrupted his discourse,
advanced to meet him, and after a tender embrace, conducted him by the hand into the midst of
the assembly; where he publicly acknowledged the benefits which he had derived from the
instructions of the philosopher. Maximus, who soon acquired the confidence, and influenced the
councils of Julian, was insensibly corrupted by the temptations of a court. His dress became
more splendid, his demeanor more lofty, and he was exposed, under a succeeding reign, to a
disgraceful inquiry into the means by which the disciple of Plato had accumulated, in the short
duration of his favor, a very scandalous proportion of wealth. Of the other philosophers and
sophists, who were invited to the Imperial residence by the choice of Julian, or by the success of
Maximus, few were able to preserve their innocence or their reputation. The liberal gifts of
money, lands, and houses, were insufficient to satiate their rapacious avarice; and the
indignation of the people was justly excited by the remembrance of their abject poverty and
disinterested professions. The penetration of Julian could not always be deceived: but he was
unwilling to despise the characters of those men whose talents deserved his esteem: he desired to
escape the double reproach of imprudence and inconstancy; and he was apprehensive of
degrading, in the eyes of the profane, the honor of letters and of religion.
The favor of Julian was almost equally divided between the Pagans, who had firmly adhered to
the worship of their ancestors, and the Christians, who prudently embraced the religion of their
sovereign. The acquisition of new proselytes gratified the ruling passions of his soul,
superstition and vanity; and he was heard to declare, with the enthusiasm of a missionary, that if
he could render each individual richer than Midas, and every city greater than Babylon, he
should not esteem himself the benefactor of mankind, unless, at the same time, he could reclaim
his subjects from their impious revolt against the immortal gods. A prince who had studied
human nature, and who possessed the treasures of the Roman empire, could adapt his arguments,
his promises, and his rewards, to every order of Christians; and the merit of a seasonable
conversion was allowed to supply the defects of a candidate, or even to expiate the guilt of a
criminal. As the army is the most forcible engine of absolute power, Julian applied himself, with
peculiar diligence, to corrupt the religion of his troops, without whose hearty concurrence every
measure must be dangerous and unsuccessful; and the natural temper of soldiers made this
conquest as easy as it was important. The legions of Gaul devoted themselves to the faith, as
well as to the fortunes, of their victorious leader; and even before the death of Constantius, he
had the satisfaction of announcing to his friends, that they assisted with fervent devotion, and
voracious appetite, at the sacrifices, which were repeatedly offered in his camp, of whole
hecatombs of fat oxen. The armies of the East, which had been trained under the standard of the
cross, and of Constantius, required a more artful and expensive mode of persuasion. On the days
of solemn and public festivals, the emperor received the homage, and rewarded the merit, of the
troops. His throne of state was encircled with the military ensigns of Rome and the republic; the
holy name of Christ was erased from the Labarum; and the symbols of war, of majesty, and of
pagan superstition, were so dexterously blended, that the faithful subject incurred the guilt of
idolatry, when he respectfully saluted the person or image of his sovereign. The soldiers passed
successively in review; and each of them, before he received from the hand of Julian a liberal
donative, proportioned to his rank and services, was required to cast a few grains of incense into
the flame which burnt upon the altar. Some Christian confessors might resist, and others might
repent; but the far greater number, allured by the prospect of gold, and awed by the presence of
the emperor, contracted the criminal engagement; and their future perseverance in the worship
of the gods was enforced by every consideration of duty and of interest. By the frequent
repetition of these arts, and at the expense of sums which would have purchased the service of
half the nations of Scythia, Julian gradually acquired for his troops the imaginary protection of
the gods, and for himself the firm and effectual support of the Roman legions. It is indeed more
than probable, that the restoration and encouragement of Paganism revealed a multitude of
pretended Christians, who, from motives of temporal advantage, had acquiesced in the religion
of the former reign; and who afterwards returned, with the same flexibility of conscience, to the
faith which was professed by the successors of Julian.
While the devout monarch incessantly labored to restore and propagate the religion of his
ancestors, he embraced the extraordinary design of rebuilding the temple of Jerusalem. In a
public epistle to the nation or community of the Jews, dispersed through the provinces, he pities
their misfortunes, condemns their oppressors, praises their constancy, declares himself their
gracious protector, and expresses a pious hope, that after his return from the Persian war, he may
be permitted to pay his grateful vows to the Almighty in his holy city of Jerusalem. The blind
superstition, and abject slavery, of those unfortunate exiles, must excite the contempt of a
philosophic emperor; but they deserved the friendship of Julian, by their implacable hatred of
the Christian name. The barren synagogue abhorred and envied the fecundity of the rebellious
church; the power of the Jews was not equal to their malice; but their gravest rabbis approved
the private murder of an apostate; and their seditious clamors had often awakened the indolence
of the Pagan magistrates. Under the reign of Constantine, the Jews became the subjects of their
revolted children nor was it long before they experienced the bitterness of domestic tyranny. The
civil immunities which had been granted, or confirmed, by Severus, were gradually repealed by
the Christian princes; and a rash tumult, excited by the Jews of Palestine, seemed to justify the
lucrative modes of oppression which were invented by the bishops and eunuchs of the court of
Constantius. The Jewish patriarch, who was still permitted to exercise a precarious jurisdiction,
held his residence at Tiberias; and the neighboring cities of Palestine were filled with the
remains of a people who fondly adhered to the promised land. But the edict of Hadrian was
renewed and enforced; and they viewed from afar the walls of the holy city, which were
profaned in their eyes by the triumph of the cross and the devotion of the Christians.
Chapter XXIII: Reign Of Julian. -- Part III.
In the midst of a rocky and barren country, the walls of Jerusalem enclosed the two mountains
of Sion and Acra, within an oval figure of about three English miles. Towards the south, the
upper town, and the fortress of David, were erected on the lofty ascent of Mount Sion: on the
north side, the buildings of the lower town covered the spacious summit of Mount Acra; and a
part of the hill, distinguished by the name of Moriah, and levelled by human industry, was
crowned with the stately temple of the Jewish nation. After the final destruction of the temple by
the arms of Titus and Hadrian, a ploughshare was drawn over the consecrated ground, as a sign
of perpetual interdiction. Sion was deserted; and the vacant space of the lower city was filled
with the public and private edifices of the Ælian colony, which spread themselves over the
adjacent hill of Calvary. The holy places were polluted with mountains of idolatry; and, either
from design or accident, a chapel was dedicated to Venus, on the spot which had been sanctified
by the death and resurrection of Christ. * Almost three hundred years after those stupendous
events, the profane chapel of Venus was demolished by the order of Constantine; and the
removal of the earth and stones revealed the holy sepulchre to the eyes of mankind. A
magnificent church was erected on that mystic ground, by the first Christian emperor; and the
effects of his pious munificence were extended to every spot which had been consecrated by the
footstep of patriarchs, of prophets, and of the Son of God.
The passionate desire of contemplating the original monuments of their redemption attracted to
Jerusalem a successive crowd of pilgrims, from the shores of the Atlantic Ocean, and the most
distant countries of the East; and their piety was authorized by the example of the empress
Helena, who appears to have united the credulity of age with the warm feelings of a recent
conversion. Sages and heroes, who have visited the memorable scenes of ancient wisdom or
glory, have confessed the inspiration of the genius of the place; and the Christian who knelt
before the holy sepulchre, ascribed his lively faith, and his fervent devotion, to the more
immediate influence of the Divine Spirit. The zeal, perhaps the avarice, of the clergy of
Jerusalem, cherished and multiplied these beneficial visits. They fixed, by unquestionable
tradition, the scene of each memorable event. They exhibited the instruments which had been
used in the passion of Christ; the nails and the lance that had pierced his hands, his feet, and his
side; the crown of thorns that was planted on his head; the pillar at which he was scourged; and,
above all, they showed the cross on which he suffered, and which was dug out of the earth in the
reign of those princes, who inserted the symbol of Christianity in the banners of the Roman
legions. Such miracles as seemed necessary to account for its extraordinary preservation, and
seasonable discovery, were gradually propagated without opposition. The custody of the true
cross, which on Easter Sunday was solemnly exposed to the people, was intrusted to the bishop
of Jerusalem; and he alone might gratify the curious devotion of the pilgrims, by the gift of small
pieces, which they encased in gold or gems, and carried away in triumph to their respective
countries. But as this gainful branch of commerce must soon have been annihilated, it was found
convenient to suppose, that the marvelous wood possessed a secret power of vegetation; and that
its substance, though continually diminished, still remained entire and unimpaired. It might
perhaps have been expected, that the influence of the place and the belief of a perpetual miracle,
should have produced some salutary effects on the morals, as well as on the faith, of the people.
Yet the most respectable of the ecclesiastical writers have been obliged to confess, not only that
the streets of Jerusalem were filled with the incessant tumult of business and pleasure, but that
every species of vice -- adultery, theft, idolatry, poisoning, murder -- was familiar to the
inhabitants of the holy city. The wealth and preeminence of the church of Jerusalem excited the
ambition of Arian, as well as orthodox, candidates; and the virtues of Cyril, who, since his death,
has been honored with the title of Saint, were displayed in the exercise, rather than in the
acquisition, of his episcopal dignity.
The vain and ambitious mind of Julian might aspire to restore the ancient glory of the temple of
Jerusalem. As the Christians were firmly persuaded that a sentence of everlasting destruction
had been pronounced against the whole fabric of the Mosaic law, the Imperial sophist would
have converted the success of his undertaking into a specious argument against the faith of
prophecy, and the truth of revelation. He was displeased with the spiritual worship of the
synagogue; but he approved the institutions of Moses, who had not disdained to adopt many of
the rites and ceremonies of Egypt. The local and national deity of the Jews was sincerely adored
by a polytheist, who desired only to multiply the number of the gods; and such was the appetite
of Julian for bloody sacrifice, that his emulation might be excited by the piety of Solomon, who
had offered, at the feast of the dedication, twenty-two thousand oxen, and one hundred and
twenty thousand sheep. These considerations might influence his designs; but the prospect of an
immediate and important advantage would not suffer the impatient monarch to expect the
remote and uncertain event of the Persian war. He resolved to erect, without delay, on the
commanding eminence of Moriah, a stately temple, which might eclipse the splendor of the
church of the resurrection on the adjacent hill of Calvary; to establish an order of priests, whose
interested zeal would detect the arts, and resist the ambition, of their Christian rivals; and to
invite a numerous colony of Jews, whose stern fanaticism would be always prepared to second,
and even to anticipate, the hostile measures of the Pagan government. Among the friends of the
emperor (if the names of emperor, and of friend, are not incompatible) the first place was
assigned, by Julian himself, to the virtuous and learned Alypius. The humanity of Alypius was
tempered by severe justice and manly fortitude; and while he exercised his abilities in the civil
administration of Britain, he imitated, in his poetical compositions, the harmony and softness of
the odes of Sappho. This minister, to whom Julian communicated, without reserve, his most
careless levities, and his most serious counsels, received an extraordinary commission to restore,
in its pristine beauty, the temple of Jerusalem; and the diligence of Alypius required and
obtained the strenuous support of the governor of Palestine. At the call of their great deliverer,
the Jews, from all the provinces of the empire, assembled on the holy mountain of their fathers;
and their insolent triumph alarmed and exasperated the Christian inhabitants of Jerusalem. The
desire of rebuilding the temple has in every age been the ruling passion of the children of Isræl.
In this propitious moment the men forgot their avarice, and the women their delicacy; spades
and pickaxes of silver were provided by the vanity of the rich, and the rubbish was transported in
mantles of silk and purple. Every purse was opened in liberal contributions, every hand claimed
a share in the pious labor, and the commands of a great monarch were executed by the
enthusiasm of a whole people.
Yet, on this occasion, the joint efforts of power and enthusiasm were unsuccessful; and the
ground of the Jewish temple, which is now covered by a Mahometan mosque, still continued to
exhibit the same edifying spectacle of ruin and desolation. Perhaps the absence and death of the
emperor, and the new maxims of a Christian reign, might explain the interruption of an arduous
work, which was attempted only in the last six months of the life of Julian. But the Christians
entertained a natural and pious expectation, that, in this memorable contest, the honor of religion
would be vindicated by some signal miracle. An earthquake, a whirlwind, and a fiery eruption,
which overturned and scattered the new foundations of the temple, are attested, with some
variations, by contemporary and respectable evidence. This public event is described by
Ambrose, bishop of Milan, in an epistle to the emperor Theodosius, which must provoke the
severe animadversion of the Jews; by the eloquent Chrysostom, who might appeal to the
memory of the elder part of his congregation at Antioch; and by Gregory Nazianzen, who
published his account of the miracle before the expiration of the same year. The last of these
writers has boldly declared, that this preternatural event was not disputed by the infidels; and his
assertion, strange as it may seem is confirmed by the unexceptionable testimony of Ammianus
Marcellinus. The philosophic soldier, who loved the virtues, without adopting the prejudices, of
his master, has recorded, in his judicious and candid history of his own times, the extraordinary
obstacles which interrupted the restoration of the temple of Jerusalem. "Whilst Alypius, assisted
by the governor of the province, urged, with vigor and diligence, the execution of the work,
horrible balls of fire breaking out near the foundations, with frequent and reiterated attacks,
rendered the place, from time to time, inaccessible to the scorched and blasted workmen; and
the victorious element continuing in this manner obstinately and resolutely bent, as it were, to
drive them to a distance, the undertaking was abandoned." * Such authority should satisfy a
believing, and must astonish an incredulous, mind. Yet a philosopher may still require the
original evidence of impartial and intelligent spectators. At this important crisis, any singular
accident of nature would assume the appearance, and produce the effects of a real prodigy. This
glorious deliverance would be speedily improved and magnified by the pious art of the clergy of
Jerusalem, and the active credulity of the Christian world and, at the distance of twenty years, a
Roman historian, care less of theological disputes, might adorn his work with the specious and
splendid miracle.
Chapter XXIII: Reign Of Julian. -- Part IV.
The restoration of the Jewish temple was secretly connected with the ruin of the Christian
church. Julian still continued to maintain the freedom of religious worship, without
distinguishing whether this universal toleration proceeded from his justice or his clemency. He
affected to pity the unhappy Christians, who were mistaken in the most important object of their
lives; but his pity was degraded by contempt, his contempt was embittered by hatred; and the
sentiments of Julian were expressed in a style of sarcastic wit, which inflicts a deep and deadly
wound, whenever it issues from the mouth of a sovereign. As he was sensible that the Christians
gloried in the name of their Redeemer, he countenanced, and perhaps enjoined, the use of the
less honorable appellation of Galilæans. He declared, that by the folly of the Galilæans, whom
he describes as a sect of fanatics, contemptible to men, and odious to the gods, the empire had
been reduced to the brink of destruction; and he insinuates in a public edict, that a frantic patient
might sometimes be cured by salutary violence. An ungenerous distinction was admitted into
the mind and counsels of Julian, that, according to the difference of their religious sentiments,
one part of his subjects deserved his favor and friendship, while the other was entitled only to
the common benefits that his justice could not refuse to an obedient people. According to a
principle, pregnant with mischief and oppression, the emperor transferred to the pontiffs of his
own religion the management of the liberal allowances for the public revenue, which had been
granted to the church by the piety of Constantine and his sons. The proud system of clerical
honors and immunities, which had been constructed with so much art and labor, was levelled to
the ground; the hopes of testamentary donations were intercepted by the rigor of the laws; and
the priests of the Christian sect were confounded with the last and most ignominious class of the
people. Such of these regulations as appeared necessary to check the ambition and avarice of the
ecclesiastics, were soon afterwards imitated by the wisdom of an orthodox prince. The peculiar
distinctions which policy has bestowed, or superstition has lavished, on the sacerdotal order,
must be confined to those priests who profess the religion of the state. But the will of the
legislator was not exempt from prejudice and passion; and it was the object of the insidious
policy of Julian, to deprive the Christians of all the temporal honors and advantages which
rendered them respectable in the eyes of the world.
A just and severe censure has been inflicted on the law which prohibited the Christians from
teaching the arts of grammar and rhetoric. The motives alleged by the emperor to justify this
partial and oppressive measure, might command, during his lifetime, the silence of slaves and
the applause of flatterers. Julian abuses the ambiguous meaning of a word which might be
indifferently applied to the language and the religion of the Greeks: he contemptuously observes,
that the men who exalt the merit of implicit faith are unfit to claim or to enjoy the advantages of
science; and he vainly contends, that if they refuse to adore the gods of Homer and
Demosthenes, they ought to content themselves with expounding Luke and Matthew in the
church of the Galilæans. In all the cities of the Roman world, the education of the youth was
intrusted to masters of grammar and rhetoric; who were elected by the magistrates, maintained
at the public expense, and distinguished by many lucrative and honorable privileges. The edict of
Julian appears to have included the physicians, and professors of all the liberal arts; and the
emperor, who reserved to himself the approbation of the candidates, was authorized by the laws
to corrupt, or to punish, the religious constancy of the most learned of the Christians. As soon as
the resignation of the more obstinate teachers had established the unrivalled dominion of the
Pagan sophists, Julian invited the rising generation to resort with freedom to the public schools,
in a just confidence, that their tender minds would receive the impressions of literature and
idolatry. If the greatest part of the Christian youth should be deterred by their own scruples, or by
those of their parents, from accepting this dangerous mode of instruction, they must, at the same
time, relinquish the benefits of a liberal education. Julian had reason to expect that, in the space
of a few years, the church would relapse into its primæval simplicity, and that the theologians,
who possessed an adequate share of the learning and eloquence of the age, would be succeeded
by a generation of blind and ignorant fanatics, incapable of defending the truth of their own
principles, or of exposing the various follies of Polytheism.
It was undoubtedly the wish and design of Julian to deprive the Christians of the advantages of
wealth, of knowledge, and of power; but the injustice of excluding them from all offices of trust
and profit seems to have been the result of his general policy, rather than the immediate
consequence of any positive law. Superior merit might deserve and obtain, some extraordinary
exceptions; but the greater part of the Christian officers were gradually removed from their
employments in the state, the army, and the provinces. The hopes of future candidates were
extinguished by the declared partiality of a prince, who maliciously reminded them, that it was
unlawful for a Christian to use the sword, either of justice, or of war; and who studiously
guarded the camp and the tribunals with the ensigns of idolatry. The powers of government were
intrusted to the pagans, who professed an ardent zeal for the religion of their ancestors; and as
the choice of the emperor was often directed by the rules of divination, the favorites whom he
preferred as the most agreeable to the gods, did not always obtain the approbation of mankind.
Under the administration of their enemies, the Christians had much to suffer, and more to
apprehend. The temper of Julian was averse to cruelty; and the care of his reputation, which was
exposed to the eyes of the universe, restrained the philosophic monarch from violating the laws
of justice and toleration, which he himself had so recently established. But the provincial
ministers of his authority were placed in a less conspicuous station. In the exercise of arbitrary
power, they consulted the wishes, rather than the commands, of their sovereign; and ventured to
exercise a secret and vexatious tyranny against the sectaries, on whom they were not permitted
to confer the honors of martyrdom. The emperor, who dissembled as long as possible his
knowledge of the injustice that was exercised in his name, expressed his real sense of the
conduct of his officers, by gentle reproofs and substantial rewards.
The most effectual instrument of oppression, with which they were armed, was the law that
obliged the Christians to make full and ample satisfaction for the temples which they had
destroyed under the preceding reign. The zeal of the triumphant church had not always expected
the sanction of the public authority; and the bishops, who were secure of impunity, had often
marched at the head of their congregation, to attack and demolish the fortresses of the prince of
darkness. The consecrated lands, which had increased the patrimony of the sovereign or of the
clergy, were clearly defined, and easily restored. But on these lands, and on the ruins of Pagan
superstition, the Christians had frequently erected their own religious edifices: and as it was
necessary to remove the church before the temple could be rebuilt, the justice and piety of the
emperor were applauded by one party, while the other deplored and execrated his sacrilegious
violence. After the ground was cleared, the restitution of those stately structures which had been
levelled with the dust, and of the precious ornaments which had been converted to Christian
uses, swelled into a very large account of damages and debt. The authors of the injury had
neither the ability nor the inclination to discharge this accumulated demand: and the impartial
wisdom of a legislator would have been displayed in balancing the adverse claims and
complaints, by an equitable and temperate arbitration. But the whole empire, and particularly the
East, was thrown into confusion by the rash edicts of Julian; and the Pagan magistrates, inflamed
by zeal and revenge, abused the rigorous privilege of the Roman law, which substitutes, in the
place of his inadequate property, the person of the insolvent debtor. Under the preceding reign,
Mark, bishop of Arethusa, had labored in the conversion of his people with arms more effectual
than those of persuasion. The magistrates required the full value of a temple which had been
destroyed by his intolerant zeal: but as they were satisfied of his poverty, they desired only to
bend his inflexible spirit to the promise of the slightest compensation. They apprehended the
aged prelate, they inhumanly scourged him, they tore his beard; and his naked body, anointed
with honey, was suspended, in a net, between heaven and earth, and exposed to the stings of
insects and the rays of a Syrian sun. From this lofty station, Mark still persisted to glory in his
crime, and to insult the impotent rage of his persecutors. He was at length rescued from their
hands, and dismissed to enjoy the honor of his divine triumph. The Arians celebrated the virtue
of their pious confessor; the Catholics ambitiously claimed his alliance; and the Pagans, who
might be susceptible of shame or remorse, were deterred from the repetition of such unavailing
cruelty. Julian spared his life: but if the bishop of Arethusa had saved the infancy of Julian,
posterity will condemn the ingratitude, instead of praising the clemency, of the emperor.
At the distance of five miles from Antioch, the Macedonian kings of Syria had consecrated to
Apollo one of the most elegant places of devotion in the Pagan world. A magnificent temple
rose in honor of the god of light; and his colossal figure almost filled the capacious sanctuary,
which was enriched with gold and gems, and adorned by the skill of the Grecian artists. The
deity was represented in a bending attitude, with a golden cup in his hand, pouring out a libation
on the earth; as if he supplicated the venerable mother to give to his arms the cold and beauteous
Daphne: for the spot was ennobled by fiction; and the fancy of the Syrian poets had transported
the amorous tale from the banks of the Peneus to those of the Orontes. The ancient rites of
Greece were imitated by the royal colony of Antioch. A stream of prophecy, which rivalled the
truth and reputation of the Delphic oracle, flowed from the Castalian fountain of Daphne. In the
adjacent fields a stadium was built by a special privilege, which had been purchased from Elis;
the Olympic games were celebrated at the expense of the city; and a revenue of thirty thousand
pounds sterling was annually applied to the public pleasures. The perpetual resort of pilgrims
and spectators insensibly formed, in the neighborhood of the temple, the stately and populous
village of Daphne, which emulated the splendor, without acquiring the title, of a provincial city.
The temple and the village were deeply bosomed in a thick grove of laurels and cypresses, which
reached as far as a circumference of ten miles, and formed in the most sultry summers a cool
and impenetrable shade. A thousand streams of the purest water, issuing from every hill,
preserved the verdure of the earth, and the temperature of the air; the senses were gratified with
harmonious sounds and aromatic odors; and the peaceful grove was consecrated to health and
joy, to luxury and love. The vigorous youth pursued, like Apollo, the object of his desires; and
the blushing maid was warned, by the fate of Daphne, to shun the folly of unseasonable coyness.
The soldier and the philosopher wisely avoided the temptation of this sensual paradise: where
pleasure, assuming the character of religion, imperceptibly dissolved the firmness of manly
virtue. But the groves of Daphne continued for many ages to enjoy the veneration of natives and
strangers; the privileges of the holy ground were enlarged by the munificence of succeeding
emperors; and every generation added new ornaments to the splendor of the temple.
When Julian, on the day of the annual festival, hastened to adore the Apollo of Daphne, his
devotion was raised to the highest pitch of eagerness and impatience. His lively imagination
anticipated the grateful pomp of victims, of libations and of incense; a long procession of youths
and virgins, clothed in white robes, the symbol of their innocence; and the tumultuous concourse
of an innumerable people. But the zeal of Antioch was diverted, since the reign of Christianity,
into a different channel. Instead of hecatombs of fat oxen sacrificed by the tribes of a wealthy
city to their tutelar deity the emperor complains that he found only a single goose, provided at
the expense of a priest, the pale and solitary in habitant of this decayed temple. The altar was
deserted, the oracle had been reduced to silence, and the holy ground was profaned by the
introduction of Christian and funereal rites. After Babylas (a bishop of Antioch, who died in
prison in the persecution of Decius) had rested near a century in his grave, his body, by the order
of Cæsar Gallus, was transported into the midst of the grove of Daphne. A magnificent church
was erected over his remains; a portion of the sacred lands was usurped for the maintenance of
the clergy, and for the burial of the Christians at Antioch, who were ambitious of lying at the feet
of their bishop; and the priests of Apollo retired, with their affrighted and indignant votaries. As
soon as another revolution seemed to restore the fortune of Paganism, the church of St. Babylas
was demolished, and new buildings were added to the mouldering edifice which had been raised
by the piety of Syrian kings. But the first and most serious care of Julian was to deliver his
oppressed deity from the odious presence of the dead and living Christians, who had so
effectually suppressed the voice of fraud or enthusiasm. The scene of infection was purified,
according to the forms of ancient rituals; the bodies were decently removed; and the ministers of
the church were permitted to convey the remains of St. Babylas to their former habitation within
the walls of Antioch. The modest behavior which might have assuaged the jealousy of a hostile
government was neglected, on this occasion, by the zeal of the Christians. The lofty car, that
transported the relics of Babylas, was followed, and accompanied, and received, by an
innumerable multitude; who chanted, with thundering acclamations, the Psalms of David the
most expressive of their contempt for idols and idolaters. The return of the saint was a triumph;
and the triumph was an insult on the religion of the emperor, who exerted his pride to dissemble
his resentment. During the night which terminated this indiscreet procession, the temple of
Daphne was in flames; the statue of Apollo was consumed; and the walls of the edifice were left
a naked and awful monument of ruin. The Christians of Antioch asserted, with religious
confidence, that the powerful intercession of St. Babylas had pointed the lightnings of heaven
against the devoted roof: but as Julian was reduced to the alternative of believing either a crime
or a miracle, he chose, without hesitation, without evidence, but with some color of probability,
to impute the fire of Daphne to the revenge of the Galilæans. Their offence, had it been
sufficiently proved, might have justified the retaliation, which was immediately executed by the
order of Julian, of shutting the doors, and confiscating the wealth, of the cathedral of Antioch.
To discover the criminals who were guilty of the tumult, of the fire, or of secreting the riches of
the church, several of the ecclesiastics were tortured; and a Presbyter, of the name of Theodoret,
was beheaded by the sentence of the Count of the East. But this hasty act was blamed by the
emperor; who lamented, with real or affected concern, that the imprudent zeal of his ministers
would tarnish his reign with the disgrace of persecution.
Chapter XXIII: Reign Of Julian. -- Part V.
The zeal of the ministers of Julian was instantly checked by the frown of their sovereign; but
when the father of his country declares himself the leader of a faction, the license of popular fury
cannot easily be restrained, nor consistently punished. Julian, in a public composition, applauds
the devotion and loyalty of the holy cities of Syria, whose pious inhabitants had destroyed, at the
first signal, the sepulchres of the Galilæans; and faintly complains, that they had revenged the
injuries of the gods with less moderation than he should have recommended. This imperfect and
reluctant confession may appear to confirm the ecclesiastical narratives; that in the cities of
Gaza, Ascalon, Cæsarea, Heliopolis, &c., the Pagans abused, without prudence or remorse, the
moment of their prosperity. That the unhappy objects of their cruelty were released from torture
only by death; and as their mangled bodies were dragged through the streets, they were pierced
(such was the universal rage) by the spits of cooks, and the distaffs of enraged women; and that
the entrails of Christian priests and virgins, after they had been tasted by those bloody fanatics,
were mixed with barley, and contemptuously thrown to the unclean animals of the city. Such
scenes of religious madness exhibit the most contemptible and odious picture of human nature;
but the massacre of Alexandria attracts still more attention, from the certainty of the fact, the
rank of the victims, and the splendor of the capital of Egypt.
George, from his parents or his education, surnamed the Cappadocian, was born at Epiphania in
Cilicia, in a fuller's shop. From this obscure and servile origin he raised himself by the talents of
a parasite; and the patrons, whom he assiduously flattered, procured for their worthless
dependent a lucrative commission, or contract, to supply the army with bacon. His employment
was mean; he rendered it infamous. He accumulated wealth by the basest arts of fraud and
corruption; but his malversations were so notorious, that George was compelled to escape from
the pursuits of justice. After this disgrace, in which he appears to have saved his fortune at the
expense of his honor, he embraced, with real or affected zeal, the profession of Arianism. From
the love, or the ostentation, of learning, he collected a valuable library of history rhetoric,
philosophy, and theology, and the choice of the prevailing faction promoted George of
Cappadocia to the throne of Athanasius. The entrance of the new archbishop was that of a
Barbarian conqueror; and each moment of his reign was polluted by cruelty and avarice. The
Catholics of Alexandria and Egypt were abandoned to a tyrant, qualified, by nature and
education, to exercise the office of persecution; but he oppressed with an impartial hand the
various inhabitants of his extensive diocese. The primate of Egypt assumed the pomp and
insolence of his lofty station; but he still betrayed the vices of his base and servile extraction.
The merchants of Alexandria were impoverished by the unjust, and almost universal, monopoly,
which he acquired, of nitre, salt, paper, funerals, &c.: and the spiritual father of a great people
condescended to practise the vile and pernicious arts of an informer. The Alexandrians could
never forget, nor forgive, the tax, which he suggested, on all the houses of the city; under an
obsolete claim, that the royal founder had conveyed to his successors, the Ptolemies and the
Cæsars, the perpetual property of the soil. The Pagans, who had been flattered with the hopes of
freedom and toleration, excited his devout avarice; and the rich temples of Alexandria were
either pillaged or insulted by the haughty prince, who exclaimed, in a loud and threatening tone,
"How long will these sepulchres be permitted to stand?" Under the reign of Constantius, he was
expelled by the fury, or rather by the justice, of the people; and it was not without a violent
struggle, that the civil and military powers of the state could restore his authority, and gratify his
revenge. The messenger who proclaimed at Alexandria the accession of Julian, announced the
downfall of the archbishop. George, with two of his obsequious ministers, Count Diodorus, and
Dracontius, master of the mint were ignominiously dragged in chains to the public prison. At the
end of twenty-four days, the prison was forced open by the rage of a superstitious multitude,
impatient of the tedious forms of judicial proceedings. The enemies of gods and men expired
under their cruel insults; the lifeless bodies of the archbishop and his associates were carried in
triumph through the streets on the back of a camel; * and the inactivity of the Athanasian party
was esteemed a shining example of evangelical patience. The remains of these guilty wretches
were thrown into the sea; and the popular leaders of the tumult declared their resolution to
disappoint the devotion of the Christians, and to intercept the future honors of these martyrs,
who had been punished, like their predecessors, by the enemies of their religion. The fears of
the Pagans were just, and their precautions ineffectual. The meritorious death of the archbishop
obliterated the memory of his life. The rival of Athanasius was dear and sacred to the Arians,
and the seeming conversion of those sectaries introduced his worship into the bosom of the
Catholic church. The odious stranger, disguising every circumstance of time and place, assumed
the mask of a martyr, a saint, and a Christian hero; and the infamous George of Cappadocia has
been transformed into the renowned St. George of England, the patron of arms, of chivalry, and
of the garter.
About the same time that Julian was informed of the tumult of Alexandria, he received
intelligence from Edessa, that the proud and wealthy faction of the Arians had insulted the
weakness of the Valentinians, and committed such disorders as ought not to be suffered with
impunity in a well-regulated state. Without expecting the slow forms of justice, the exasperated
prince directed his mandate to the magistrates of Edessa, by which he confiscated the whole
property of the church: the money was distributed among the soldiers; the lands were added to
the domain; and this act of oppression was aggravated by the most ungenerous irony. "I show
myself," says Julian, "the true friend of the Galilæans. Their admirable law has promised the
kingdom of heaven to the poor; and they will advance with more diligence in the paths of virtue
and salvation, when they are relieved by my assistance from the load of temporal possessions.
Take care," pursued the monarch, in a more serious tone, "take care how you provoke my
patience and humanity. If these disorders continue, I will revenge on the magistrates the crimes
of the people; and you will have reason to dread, not only confiscation and exile, but fire and the
sword." The tumults of Alexandria were doubtless of a more bloody and dangerous nature: but a
Christian bishop had fallen by the hands of the Pagans; and the public epistle of Julian affords a
very lively proof of the partial spirit of his administration. His reproaches to the citizens of
Alexandria are mingled with expressions of esteem and tenderness; and he laments, that, on this
occasion, they should have departed from the gentle and generous manners which attested their
Grecian extraction. He gravely censures the offence which they had committed against the laws
of justice and humanity; but he recapitulates, with visible complacency, the intolerable
provocations which they had so long endured from the impious tyranny of George of
Cappadocia. Julian admits the principle, that a wise and vigorous government should chastise
the insolence of the people; yet, in consideration of their founder Alexander, and of Serapis their
tutelar deity, he grants a free and gracious pardon to the guilty city, for which he again feels the
affection of a brother.
After the tumult of Alexandria had subsided, Athanasius, amidst the public acclamations, seated
himself on the throne from whence his unworthy competitor had been precipitated: and as the
zeal of the archbishop was tempered with discretion, the exercise of his authority tended not to
inflame, but to reconcile, the minds of the people. His pastoral labors were not confined to the
narrow limits of Egypt. The state of the Christian world was present to his active and capacious
mind; and the age, the merit, the reputation of Athanasius, enabled him to assume, in a moment
of danger, the office of Ecclesiastical Dictator. Three years were not yet elapsed since the
majority of the bishops of the West had ignorantly, or reluctantly, subscribed the Confession of
Rimini. They repented, they believed, but they dreaded the unseasonable rigor of their orthodox
brethren; and if their pride was stronger than their faith, they might throw themselves into the
arms of the Arians, to escape the indignity of a public penance, which must degrade them to the
condition of obscure laymen. At the same time the domestic differences concerning the union
and distinction of the divine persons, were agitated with some heat among the Catholic doctors;
and the progress of this metaphysical controversy seemed to threaten a public and lasting
division of the Greek and Latin churches. By the wisdom of a select synod, to which the name
and presence of Athanasius gave the authority of a general council, the bishops, who had
unwarily deviated into error, were admitted to the communion of the church, on the easy
condition of subscribing the Nicene Creed; without any formal acknowledgment of their past
fault, or any minute definition of their scholastic opinions. The advice of the primate of Egypt
had already prepared the clergy of Gaul and Spain, of Italy and Greece, for the reception of this
salutary measure; and, notwithstanding the opposition of some ardent spirits, the fear of the
common enemy promoted the peace and harmony of the Christians.
The skill and diligence of the primate of Egypt had improved the season of tranquillity, before it
was interrupted by the hostile edicts of the emperor. Julian, who despised the Christians,
honored Athanasius with his sincere and peculiar hatred. For his sake alone, he introduced an
arbitrary distinction, repugnant at least to the spirit of his former declarations. He maintained,
that the Galilæans, whom he had recalled from exile, were not restored, by that general
indulgence, to the possession of their respective churches; and he expressed his astonishment,
that a criminal, who had been repeatedly condemned by the judgment of the emperors, should
dare to insult the majesty of the laws, and insolently usurp the archiepiscopal throne of
Alexandria, without expecting the orders of his sovereign. As a punishment for the imaginary
offence, he again banished Athanasius from the city; and he was pleased to suppose, that this act
of justice would be highly agreeable to his pious subjects. The pressing solicitations of the
people soon convinced him, that the majority of the Alexandrians were Christians; and that the
greatest part of the Christians were firmly attached to the cause of their oppressed primate. But
the knowledge of their sentiments, instead of persuading him to recall his decree, provoked him
to extend to all Egypt the term of the exile of Athanasius. The zeal of the multitude rendered
Julian still more inexorable: he was alarmed by the danger of leaving at the head of a tumultuous
city, a daring and popular leader; and the language of his resentment discovers the opinion
which he entertained of the courage and abilities of Athanasius. The execution of the sentence
was still delayed, by the caution or negligence of Ecdicius, præfect of Egypt, who was at length
awakened from his lethargy by a severe reprimand. "Though you neglect," says Julian, "to write
to me on any other subject, at least it is your duty to inform me of your conduct towards
Athanasius, the enemy of the gods. My intentions have been long since communicated to you. I
swear by the great Serapis, that unless, on the calends of December, Athanasius has departed
from Alexandria, nay, from Egypt, the officers of your government shall pay a fine of one
hundred pounds of gold. You know my temper: I am slow to condemn, but I am still slower to
forgive." This epistle was enforced by a short postscript, written with the emperor's own hand.
"The contempt that is shown for all the gods fills me with grief and indignation. There is nothing
that I should see, nothing that I should hear, with more pleasure, than the expulsion of
Athanasius from all Egypt. The abominable wretch! Under my reign, the baptism of several
Grecian ladies of the highest rank has been the effect of his persecutions." The death of
Athanasius was not expressly commanded; but the præfect of Egypt understood that it was safer
for him to exceed, than to neglect, the orders of an irritated master. The archbishop prudently
retired to the monasteries of the Desert; eluded, with his usual dexterity, the snares of the
enemy; and lived to triumph over the ashes of a prince, who, in words of formidable import, had
declared his wish that the whole venom of the Galilæan school were contained in the single
person of Athanasius.
I have endeavored faithfully to represent the artful system by which Julian proposed to obtain the
effects, without incurring the guilt, or reproach, of persecution. But if the deadly spirit of
fanaticism perverted the heart and understanding of a virtuous prince, it must, at the same time,
be confessed that the real sufferings of the Christians were inflamed and magnified by human
passions and religious enthusiasm. The meekness and resignation which had distinguished the
primitive disciples of the gospel, was the object of the applause, rather than of the imitation of
their successors. The Christians, who had now possessed above forty years the civil and
ecclesiastical government of the empire, had contracted the insolent vices of prosperity, and the
habit of believing that the saints alone were entitled to reign over the earth. As soon as the
enmity of Julian deprived the clergy of the privileges which had been conferred by the favor of
Constantine, they complained of the most cruel oppression; and the free toleration of idolaters
and heretics was a subject of grief and scandal to the orthodox party. The acts of violence,
which were no longer countenanced by the magistrates, were still committed by the zeal of the
people. At Pessinus, the altar of Cybele was overturned almost in the presence of the emperor;
and in the city of Cæsarea in Cappadocia, the temple of Fortune, the sole place of worship which
had been left to the Pagans, was destroyed by the rage of a popular tumult. On these occasions, a
prince, who felt for the honor of the gods, was not disposed to interrupt the course of justice; and
his mind was still more deeply exasperated, when he found that the fanatics, who had deserved
and suffered the punishment of incendiaries, were rewarded with the honors of martyrdom. The
Christian subjects of Julian were assured of the hostile designs of their sovereign; and, to their
jealous apprehension, every circumstance of his government might afford some grounds of
discontent and suspicion. In the ordinary administration of the laws, the Christians, who formed
so large a part of the people, must frequently be condemned: but their indulgent brethren,
without examining the merits of the cause, presumed their innocence, allowed their claims, and
imputed the severity of their judge to the partial malice of religious persecution. These present
hardships, intolerable as they might appear, were represented as a slight prelude of the
impending calamities. The Christians considered Julian as a cruel and crafty tyrant; who
suspended the execution of his revenge till he should return victorious from the Persian war.
They expected, that as soon as he had triumphed over the foreign enemies of Rome, he would
lay aside the irksome mask of dissimulation; that the amphitheatre would stream with the blood
of hermits and bishops; and that the Christians who still persevered in the profession of the faith,
would be deprived of the common benefits of nature and society. Every calumny that could
wound the reputation of the Apostate, was credulously embraced by the fears and hatred of his
adversaries; and their indiscreet clamors provoked the temper of a sovereign, whom it was their
duty to respect, and their interest to flatter. They still protested, that prayers and tears were their
only weapons against the impious tyrant, whose head they devoted to the justice of offended
Heaven. But they insinuated, with sullen resolution, that their submission was no longer the
effect of weakness; and that, in the imperfect state of human virtue, the patience, which is
founded on principle, may be exhausted by persecution. It is impossible to determine how far the
zeal of Julian would have prevailed over his good sense and humanity; but if we seriously reflect
on the strength and spirit of the church, we shall be convinced, that before the emperor could
have extinguished the religion of Christ, he must have involved his country in the horrors of a
civil war.
Chapter XXIV: The Retreat And Death Of Julian.
Part I.
Residence Of Julian At Antioch. -- His Successful Expedition Against The Persians. -- Passage
Of The Tigris -- The Retreat And Death Of Julian. -- Election Of Jovian. -- He Saves The Roman
Army By A Disgraceful Treaty.
The philosophical fable which Julian composed under the name of the Cæsars, is one of the
most agreeable and instructive productions of ancient wit. During the freedom and equality of
the days of the Saturnalia, Romulus prepared a feast for the deities of Olympus, who had
adopted him as a worthy associate, and for the Roman princes, who had reigned over his martial
people, and the vanquished nations of the earth. The immortals were placed in just order on their
thrones of state, and the table of the Cæsars was spread below the Moon in the upper region of
the air. The tyrants, who would have disgraced the society of gods and men, were thrown
headlong, by the inexorable Nemesis, into the Tartarean abyss. The rest of the Cæsars
successively advanced to their seats; and as they passed, the vices, the defects, the blemishes of
their respective characters, were maliciously noticed by old Silenus, a laughing moralist, who
disguised the wisdom of a philosopher under the mask of a Bacchanal. As soon as the feast was
ended, the voice of Mercury proclaimed the will of Jupiter, that a celestial crown should be the
reward of superior merit. Julius Cæsar, Augustus, Trajan, and Marcus Antoninus, were selected
as the most illustrious candidates; the effeminate Constantine was not excluded from this
honorable competition, and the great Alexander was invited to dispute the prize of glory with the
Roman heroes. Each of the candidates was allowed to display the merit of his own exploits; but,
in the judgment of the gods, the modest silence of Marcus pleaded more powerfully than the
elaborate orations of his haughty rivals. When the judges of this awful contest proceeded to
examine the heart, and to scrutinize the springs of action, the superiority of the Imperial Stoic
appeared still more decisive and conspicuous. Alexander and Cæsar, Augustus, Trajan, and
Constantine, acknowledged, with a blush, that fame, or power, or pleasure had been the
important object of their labors: but the gods themselves beheld, with reverence and love, a
virtuous mortal, who had practised on the throne the lessons of philosophy; and who, in a state
of human imperfection, had aspired to imitate the moral attributes of the Deity. The value of this
agreeable composition (the Cæsars of Julian) is enhanced by the rank of the author. A prince,
who delineates, with freedom, the vices and virtues of his predecessors, subscribes, in every line,
the censure or approbation of his own conduct.
In the cool moments of reflection, Julian preferred the useful and benevolent virtues of
Antoninus; but his ambitious spirit was inflamed by the glory of Alexander; and he solicited,
with equal ardor, the esteem of the wise, and the applause of the multitude. In the season of life
when the powers of the mind and body enjoy the most active vigor, the emperor who was
instructed by the experience, and animated by the success, of the German war, resolved to
signalize his reign by some more splendid and memorable achievement. The ambassadors of the
East, from the continent of India, and the Isle of Ceylon, had respectfully saluted the Roman
purple. The nations of the West esteemed and dreaded the personal virtues of Julian, both in
peace and war. He despised the trophies of a Gothic victory, and was satisfied that the rapacious
Barbarians of the Danube would be restrained from any future violation of the faith of treaties by
the terror of his name, and the additional fortifications with which he strengthened the Thracian
and Illyrian frontiers. The successor of Cyrus and Artaxerxes was the only rival whom he
deemed worthy of his arms; and he resolved, by the final conquest of Persia, to chastise the
naughty nation which had so long resisted and insulted the majesty of Rome. As soon as the
Persian monarch was informed that the throne of Constantius was filed by a prince of a very
different character, he condescended to make some artful, or perhaps sincere, overtures towards
a negotiation of peace. But the pride of Sapor was astonished by the firmness of Julian; who
sternly declared, that he would never consent to hold a peaceful conference among the flames
and ruins of the cities of Mesopotamia; and who added, with a smile of contempt, that it was
needless to treat by ambassadors, as he himself had determined to visit speedily the court of
Persia. The impatience of the emperor urged the diligence of the military preparations. The
generals were named; and Julian, marching from Constantinople through the provinces of Asia
Minor, arrived at Antioch about eight months after the death of his predecessor. His ardent
desire to march into the heart of Persia, was checked by the indispensable duty of regulating the
state of the empire; by his zeal to revive the worship of the gods; and by the advice of his wisest
friends; who represented the necessity of allowing the salutary interval of winter quarters, to
restore the exhausted strength of the legions of Gaul, and the discipline and spirit of the Eastern
troops. Julian was persuaded to fix, till the ensuing spring, his residence at Antioch, among a
people maliciously disposed to deride the haste, and to censure the delays, of their sovereign.
If Julian had flattered himself, that his personal connection with the capital of the East would be
productive of mutual satisfaction to the prince and people, he made a very false estimate of his
own character, and of the manners of Antioch. The warmth of the climate disposed the natives
to the most intemperate enjoyment of tranquillity and opulence; and the lively licentiousness of
the Greeks was blended with the hereditary softness of the Syrians. Fashion was the only law,
pleasure the only pursuit, and the splendor of dress and furniture was the only distinction of the
citizens of Antioch. The arts of luxury were honored; the serious and manly virtues were the
subject of ridicule; and the contempt for female modesty and reverent age announced the
universal corruption of the capital of the East. The love of spectacles was the taste, or rather
passion, of the Syrians; the most skilful artists were procured from the adjacent cities; a
considerable share of the revenue was devoted to the public amusements; and the magnificence
of the games of the theatre and circus was considered as the happiness and as the glory of
Antioch. The rustic manners of a prince who disdained such glory, and was insensible of such
happiness, soon disgusted the delicacy of his subjects; and the effeminate Orientals could neither
imitate, nor admire, the severe simplicity which Julian always maintained, and sometimes
affected. The days of festivity, consecrated, by ancient custom, to the honor of the gods, were the
only occasions in which Julian relaxed his philosophic severity; and those festivals were the only
days in which the Syrians of Antioch could reject the allurements of pleasure. The majority of
the people supported the glory of the Christian name, which had been first invented by their
ancestors: they contended themselves with disobeying the moral precepts, but they were
scrupulously attached to the speculative doctrines of their religion. The church of Antioch was
distracted by heresy and schism; but the Arians and the Athanasians, the followers of Meletius
and those of Paulinus, were actuated by the same pious hatred of their common adversary.
The strongest prejudice was entertained against the character of an apostate, the enemy and
successor of a prince who had engaged the affections of a very numerous sect; and the removal
of St. Babylas excited an implacable opposition to the person of Julian. His subjects complained,
with superstitious indignation, that famine had pursued the emperor's steps from Constantinople
to Antioch; and the discontent of a hungry people was exasperated by the injudicious attempt to
relieve their distress. The inclemency of the season had affected the harvests of Syria; and the
price of bread, in the markets of Antioch, had naturally risen in proportion to the scarcity of
corn. But the fair and reasonable proportion was soon violated by the rapacious arts of
monopoly. In this unequal contest, in which the produce of the land is claimed by one party as
his exclusive property, is used by another as a lucrative object of trade, and is required by a third
for the daily and necessary support of life, all the profits of the intermediate agents are
accumulated on the head of the defenceless customers. The hardships of their situation were
exaggerated and increased by their own impatience and anxiety; and the apprehension of a
scarcity gradually produced the appearances of a famine. When the luxurious citizens of Antioch
complained of the high price of poultry and fish, Julian publicly declared, that a frugal city ought
to be satisfied with a regular supply of wine, oil, and bread; but he acknowledged, that it was the
duty of a sovereign to provide for the subsistence of his people. With this salutary view, the
emperor ventured on a very dangerous and doubtful step, of fixing, by legal authority, the value
of corn. He enacted, that, in a time of scarcity, it should be sold at a price which had seldom
been known in the most plentiful years; and that his own example might strengthen his laws, he
sent into the market four hundred and twenty-two thousand modii, or measures, which were
drawn by his order from the granaries of Hierapolis, of Chalcis, and even of Egypt. The
consequences might have been foreseen, and were soon felt. The Imperial wheat was purchased
by the rich merchants; the proprietors of land, or of corn, withheld from the city the accustomed
supply; and the small quantities that appeared in the market were secretly sold at an advanced
and illegal price. Julian still continued to applaud his own policy, treated the complaints of the
people as a vain and ungrateful murmur, and convinced Antioch that he had inherited the
obstinacy, though not the cruelty, of his brother Gallus. The remonstrances of the municipal
senate served only to exasperate his inflexible mind. He was persuaded, perhaps with truth, that
the senators of Antioch who possessed lands, or were concerned in trade, had themselves
contributed to the calamities of their country; and he imputed the disrespectful boldness which
they assumed, to the sense, not of public duty, but of private interest. The whole body, consisting
of two hundred of the most noble and wealthy citizens, were sent, under a guard, from the palace
to the prison; and though they were permitted, before the close of evening, to return to their
respective houses, the emperor himself could not obtain the forgiveness which he had so easily
granted. The same grievances were still the subject of the same complaints, which were
industriously circulated by the wit and levity of the Syrian Greeks. During the licentious days of
the Saturnalia, the streets of the city resounded with insolent songs, which derided the laws, the
religion, the personal conduct, and even the beard, of the emperor; the spirit of Antioch was
manifested by the connivance of the magistrates, and the applause of the multitude. The disciple
of Socrates was too deeply affected by these popular insults; but the monarch, endowed with a
quick sensibility, and possessed of absolute power, refused his passions the gratification of
revenge. A tyrant might have proscribed, without distinction, the lives and fortunes of the
citizens of Antioch; and the unwarlike Syrians must have patiently submitted to the lust, the
rapaciousness and the cruelty, of the faithful legions of Gaul. A milder sentence might have
deprived the capital of the East of its honors and privileges; and the courtiers, perhaps the
subjects, of Julian, would have applauded an act of justice, which asserted the dignity of the
supreme magistrate of the republic. But instead of abusing, or exerting, the authority of the
state, to revenge his personal injuries, Julian contented himself with an inoffensive mode of
retaliation, which it would be in the power of few princes to employ. He had been insulted by
satires and libels; in his turn, he composed, under the title of the Enemy of the Beard, an
ironical confession of his own faults, and a severe satire on the licentious and effeminate
manners of Antioch. This Imperial reply was publicly exposed before the gates of the palace;
and the Misopogon still remains a singular monument of the resentment, the wit, the humanity,
and the indiscretion of Julian. Though he affected to laugh, he could not forgive. His contempt
was expressed, and his revenge might be gratified, by the nomination of a governor worthy only
of such subjects; and the emperor, forever renouncing the ungrateful city, proclaimed his
resolution to pass the ensuing winter at Tarsus in Cilicia.
Yet Antioch possessed one citizen, whose genius and virtues might atone, in the opinion of
Julian, for the vice and folly of his country. The sophist Libanius was born in the capital of the
East; he publicly professed the arts of rhetoric and declamation at Nice, Nicomedia,
Constantinople, Athens, and, during the remainder of his life, at Antioch. His school was
assiduously frequented by the Grecian youth; his disciples, who sometimes exceeded the number
of eighty, celebrated their incomparable master; and the jealousy of his rivals, who persecuted
him from one city to another, confirmed the favorable opinion which Libanius ostentatiously
displayed of his superior merit. The preceptors of Julian had extorted a rash but solemn
assurance, that he would never attend the lectures of their adversary: the curiosity of the royal
youth was checked and inflamed: he secretly procured the writings of this dangerous sophist, and
gradually surpassed, in the perfect imitation of his style, the most laborious of his domestic
pupils. When Julian ascended the throne, he declared his impatience to embrace and reward the
Syrian sophist, who had preserved, in a degenerate age, the Grecian purity of taste, of manners,
and of religion. The emperor's prepossession was increased and justified by the discreet pride of
his favorite. Instead of pressing, with the foremost of the crowd, into the palace of
Constantinople, Libanius calmly expected his arrival at Antioch; withdrew from court on the
first symptoms of coldness and indifference; required a formal invitation for each visit; and
taught his sovereign an important lesson, that he might command the obedience of a subject, but
that he must deserve the attachment of a friend. The sophists of every age, despising, or affecting
to despise, the accidental distinctions of birth and fortune, reserve their esteem for the superior
qualities of the mind, with which they themselves are so plentifully endowed. Julian might
disdain the acclamations of a venal court, who adored the Imperial purple; but he was deeply
flattered by the praise, the admonition, the freedom, and the envy of an independent philosopher,
who refused his favors, loved his person, celebrated his fame, and protected his memory. The
voluminous writings of Libanius still exist; for the most part, they are the vain and idle
compositions of an orator, who cultivated the science of words; the productions of a recluse
student, whose mind, regardless of his contemporaries, was incessantly fixed on the Trojan war
and the Athenian commonwealth. Yet the sophist of Antioch sometimes descended from this
imaginary elevation; he entertained a various and elaborate correspondence; he praised the
virtues of his own times; he boldly arraigned the abuse of public and private life; and he
eloquently pleaded the cause of Antioch against the just resentment of Julian and Theodosius. It
is the common calamity of old age, to lose whatever might have rendered it desirable; but
Libanius experienced the peculiar misfortune of surviving the religion and the sciences, to which
he had consecrated his genius. The friend of Julian was an indignant spectator of the triumph of
Christianity; and his bigotry, which darkened the prospect of the visible world, did not inspire
Libanius with any lively hopes of celestial glory and happiness.
Chapter XXIV: The Retreat And Death Of Julian. -- Part II.
The martial impatience of Julian urged him to take the field in the beginning of the spring; and
he dismissed, with contempt and reproach, the senate of Antioch, who accompanied the emperor
beyond the limits of their own territory, to which he was resolved never to return. After a
laborious march of two days, he halted on the third at Beræa, or Aleppo, where he had the
mortification of finding a senate almost entirely Christian; who received with cold and formal
demonstrations of respect the eloquent sermon of the apostle of paganism. The son of one of the
most illustrious citizens of Beræa, who had embraced, either from interest or conscience, the
religion of the emperor, was disinherited by his angry parent. The father and the son were invited
to the Imperial table. Julian, placing himself between them, attempted, without success, to
inculcate the lesson and example of toleration; supported, with affected calmness, the indiscreet
zeal of the aged Christian, who seemed to forget the sentiments of nature, and the duty of a
subject; and at length, turning towards the afflicted youth, "Since you have lost a father," said he,
"for my sake, it is incumbent on me to supply his place." The emperor was received in a manner
much more agreeable to his wishes at Batnæ, * a small town pleasantly seated in a grove of
cypresses, about twenty miles from the city of Hierapolis. The solemn rites of sacrifice were
decently prepared by the inhabitants of Batnæ, who seemed attached to the worship of their
tutelar deities, Apollo and Jupiter; but the serious piety of Julian was offended by the tumult of
their applause; and he too clearly discerned, that the smoke which arose from their altars was the
incense of flattery, rather than of devotion. The ancient and magnificent temple which had
sanctified, for so many ages, the city of Hierapolis, no longer subsisted; and the consecrated
wealth, which afforded a liberal maintenance to more than three hundred priests, might hasten
its downfall. Yet Julian enjoyed the satisfaction of embracing a philosopher and a friend, whose
religious firmness had withstood the pressing and repeated solicitations of Constantius and
Gallus, as often as those princes lodged at his house, in their passage through Hierapolis. In the
hurry of military preparation, and the careless confidence of a familiar correspondence, the zeal
of Julian appears to have been lively and uniform. He had now undertaken an important and
difficult war; and the anxiety of the event rendered him still more attentive to observe and
register the most trifling presages, from which, according to the rules of divination, any
knowledge of futurity could be derived. He informed Libanius of his progress as far as
Hierapolis, by an elegant epistle, which displays the facility of his genius, and his tender
friendship for the sophist of Antioch.
Hierapolis, * situate almost on the banks of the Euphrates, had been appointed for the general
rendezvous of the Roman troops, who immediately passed the great river on a bridge of boats,
which was previously constructed. If the inclinations of Julian had been similar to those of his
predecessor, he might have wasted the active and important season of the year in the circus of
Samosata or in the churches of Edessa. But as the warlike emperor, instead of Constantius, had
chosen Alexander for his model, he advanced without delay to Carrhæ, a very ancient city of
Mesopotamia, at the distance of fourscore miles from Hierapolis. The temple of the Moon
attracted the devotion of Julian; but the halt of a few days was principally employed in
completing the immense preparations of the Persian war. The secret of the expedition had
hitherto remained in his own breast; but as Carrhæ is the point of separation of the two great
roads, he could no longer conceal whether it was his design to attack the dominions of Sapor on
the side of the Tigris, or on that of the Euphrates. The emperor detached an army of thirty
thousand men, under the command of his kinsman Procopius, and of Sebastian, who had been
duke of Egypt. They were ordered to direct their march towards Nisibis, and to secure the
frontier from the desultory incursions of the enemy, before they attempted the passage of the
Tigris. Their subsequent operations were left to the discretion of the generals; but Julian
expected, that after wasting with fire and sword the fertile districts of Media and Adiabene, they
might arrive under the walls of Ctesiphon at the same time that he himself, advancing with equal
steps along the banks of the Euphrates, should besiege the capital of the Persian monarchy. The
success of this well-concerted plan depended, in a great measure, on the powerful and ready
assistance of the king of Armenia, who, without exposing the safety of his own dominions, might
detach an army of four thousand horse, and twenty thousand foot, to the assistance of the
Romans. But the feeble Arsaces Tiranus, king of Armenia, had degenerated still more
shamefully than his father Chosroes, from the manly virtues of the great Tiridates; and as the
pusillanimous monarch was averse to any enterprise of danger and glory, he could disguise his
timid indolence by the more decent excuses of religion and gratitude. He expressed a pious
attachment to the memory of Constantius, from whose hands he had received in marriage
Olympias, the daughter of the præfect Ablavius; and the alliance of a female, who had been
educated as the destined wife of the emperor Constans, exalted the dignity of a Barbarian king.
Tiranus professed the Christian religion; he reigned over a nation of Christians; and he was
restrained, by every principle of conscience and interest, from contributing to the victory, which
would consummate the ruin of the church. The alienated mind of Tiranus was exasperated by the
indiscretion of Julian, who treated the king of Armenia as his slave, and as the enemy of the
gods. The haughty and threatening style of the Imperial mandates awakened the secret
indignation of a prince, who, in the humiliating state of dependence, was still conscious of his
royal descent from the Arsacides, the lords of the East, and the rivals of the Roman power.
The military dispositions of Julian were skilfully contrived to deceive the spies and to divert the
attention of Sapor. The legions appeared to direct their march towards Nisibis and the Tigris. On
a sudden they wheeled to the right; traversed the level and naked plain of Carrhæ; and reached,
on the third day, the banks of the Euphrates, where the strong town of Nicephorium, or
Callinicum, had been founded by the Macedonian kings. From thence the emperor pursued his
march, above ninety miles, along the winding stream of the Euphrates, till, at length, about one
month after his departure from Antioch, he discovered the towers of Circesium, * the extreme
limit of the Roman dominions. The army of Julian, the most numerous that any of the Cæsars
had ever led against Persia, consisted of sixty-five thousand effective and well-disciplined
soldiers. The veteran bands of cavalry and infantry, of Romans and Barbarians, had been
selected from the different provinces; and a just preeminence of loyalty and valor was claimed
by the hardy Gauls, who guarded the throne and person of their beloved prince. A formidable
body of Scythian auxiliaries had been transported from another climate, and almost from another
world, to invade a distant country, of whose name and situation they were ignorant. The love of
rapine and war allured to the Imperial standard several tribes of Saracens, or roving Arabs,
whose service Julian had commanded, while he sternly refuse the payment of the accustomed
subsidies. The broad channel of the Euphrates was crowded by a fleet of eleven hundred ships,
destined to attend the motions, and to satisfy the wants, of the Roman army. The military
strength of the fleet was composed of fifty armed galleys; and these were accompanied by an
equal number of flat-bottomed boats, which might occasionally be connected into the form of
temporary bridges. The rest of the ships, partly constructed of timber, and partly covered with
raw hides, were laden with an almost inexhaustible supply of arms and engines, of utensils and
provisions. The vigilant humanity of Julian had embarked a very large magazine of vinegar and
biscuit for the use of the soldiers, but he prohibited the indulgence of wine; and rigorously
stopped a long string of superfluous camels that attempted to follow the rear of the army. The
River Chaboras falls into the Euphrates at Circesium; and as soon as the trumpet gave the signal
of march, the Romans passed the little stream which separated two mighty and hostile empires.
The custom of ancient discipline required a military oration; and Julian embraced every
opportunity of displaying his eloquence. He animated the impatient and attentive legions by the
example of the inflexible courage and glorious triumphs of their ancestors. He excited their
resentment by a lively picture of the insolence of the Persians; and he exhorted them to imitate
his firm resolution, either to extirpate that perfidious nation, or to devote his life in the cause of
the republic. The eloquence of Julian was enforced by a donative of one hundred and thirty
pieces of silver to every soldier; and the bridge of the Chaboras was instantly cut away, to
convince the troops that they must place their hopes of safety in the success of their arms. Yet
the prudence of the emperor induced him to secure a remote frontier, perpetually exposed to the
inroads of the hostile Arabs. A detachment of four thousand men was left at Circesium, which
completed, to the number of ten thousand, the regular garrison of that important fortress.
From the moment that the Romans entered the enemy's country, the country of an active and
artful enemy, the order of march was disposed in three columns. The strength of the infantry,
and consequently of the whole army was placed in the centre, under the peculiar command of
their master-general Victor. On the right, the brave Nevitta led a column of several legions along
the banks of the Euphrates, and almost always in sight of the fleet. The left flank of the army
was protected by the column of cavalry. Hormisdas and Arinthæus were appointed generals of
the horse; and the singular adventures of Hormisdas are not undeserving of our notice. He was a
Persian prince, of the royal race of the Sassanides, who, in the troubles of the minority of Sapor,
had escaped from prison to the hospitable court of the great Constantine. Hormisdas at first
excited the compassion, and at length acquired the esteem, of his new masters; his valor and
fidelity raised him to the military honors of the Roman service; and though a Christian, he might
indulge the secret satisfaction of convincing his ungrateful country, than at oppressed subject
may prove the most dangerous enemy. Such was the disposition of the three principal columns.
The front and flanks of the army were covered by Lucilianus with a flying detachment of fifteen
hundred light-armed soldiers, whose active vigilance observed the most distant signs, and
conveyed the earliest notice, of any hostile approach. Dagalaiphus, and Secundinus duke of
Osrhoene, conducted the troops of the rear-guard; the baggage securely proceeded in the
intervals of the columns; and the ranks, from a motive either of use or ostentation, were formed
in such open order, that the whole line of march extended almost ten miles. The ordinary post of
Julian was at the head of the centre column; but as he preferred the duties of a general to the
state of a monarch, he rapidly moved, with a small escort of light cavalry, to the front, the rear,
the flanks, wherever his presence could animate or protect the march of the Roman army. The
country which they traversed from the Chaboras, to the cultivated lands of Assyria, may be
considered as a part of the desert of Arabia, a dry and barren waste, which could never be
improved by the most powerful arts of human industry. Julian marched over the same ground
which had been trod above seven hundred years before by the footsteps of the younger Cyrus,
and which is described by one of the companions of his expedition, the sage and heroic
Xenophon. "The country was a plain throughout, as even as the sea, and full of wormwood; and
if any other kind of shrubs or reeds grew there, they had all an aromatic smell, but no trees could
be seen. Bustards and ostriches, antelopes and wild asses, appeared to be the only inhabitants of
the desert; and the fatigues of the march were alleviated by the amusements of the chase." The
loose sand of the desert was frequently raised by the wind into clouds of dust; and a great
number of the soldiers of Julian, with their tents, were suddenly thrown to the ground by the
violence of an unexpected hurricane.
The sandy plains of Mesopotamia were abandoned to the antelopes and wild asses of the desert;
but a variety of populous towns and villages were pleasantly situated on the banks of the
Euphrates, and in the islands which are occasionally formed by that river. The city of Annah, or
Anatho, the actual residence of an Arabian emir, is composed of two long streets, which
enclose, within a natural fortification, a small island in the midst, and two fruitful spots on either
side, of the Euphrates. The warlike inhabitants of Anatho showed a disposition to stop the march
of a Roman emperor; till they were diverted from such fatal presumption by the mild
exhortations of Prince Hormisdas, and the approaching terrors of the fleet and army. They
implored, and experienced, the clemency of Julian, who transplanted the people to an
advantageous settlement, near Chalcis in Syria, and admitted Pusæus, the governor, to an
honorable rank in his service and friendship. But the impregnable fortress of Thilutha could
scorn the menace of a siege; and the emperor was obliged to content himself with an insulting
promise, that, when he had subdued the interior provinces of Persia, Thilutha would no longer
refuse to grace the triumph of the emperor. The inhabitants of the open towns, unable to resist,
and unwilling to yield, fled with precipitation; and their houses, filled with spoil and provisions,
were occupied by the soldiers of Julian, who massacred, without remorse and without
punishment, some defenceless women. During the march, the Surenas, * or Persian general, and
Malek Rodosaces, the renowned emir of the tribe of Gassan, incessantly hovered round the
army; every straggler was intercepted; every detachment was attacked; and the valiant
Hormisdas escaped with some difficulty from their hands. But the Barbarians were finally
repulsed; the country became every day less favorable to the operations of cavalry; and when the
Romans arrived at Macepracta, they perceived the ruins of the wall, which had been constructed
by the ancient kings of Assyria, to secure their dominions from the incursions of the Medes.
These preliminaries of the expedition of Julian appear to have employed about fifteen days; and
we may compute near three hundred miles from the fortress of Circesium to the wall of
Macepracta.
The fertile province of Assyria, which stretched beyond the Tigris, as far as the mountains of
Media, extended about four hundred miles from the ancient wall of Macepracta, to the territory
of Basra, where the united streams of the Euphrates and Tigris discharge themselves into the
Persian Gulf. The whole country might have claimed the peculiar name of Mesopotamia; as the
two rivers, which are never more distant than fifty, approach, between Bagdad and Babylon,
within twenty-five miles, of each other. A multitude of artificial canals, dug without much labor
in a soft and yielding soil connected the rivers, and intersected the plain of Assyria. The uses of
these artificial canals were various and important. They served to discharge the superfluous
waters from one river into the other, at the season of their respective inundations. Subdividing
themselves into smaller and smaller branches, they refreshed the dry lands, and supplied the
deficiency of rain. They facilitated the intercourse of peace and commerce; and, as the dams
could be speedily broke down, they armed the despair of the Assyrians with the means of
opposing a sudden deluge to the progress of an invading army. To the soil and climate of
Assyria, nature had denied some of her choicest gifts, the vine, the olive, and the fig-tree; * but
the food which supports the life of man, and particularly wheat and barley, were produced with
inexhaustible fertility; and the husbandman, who committed his seed to the earth, was frequently
rewarded with an increase of two, or even of three, hundred. The face of the country was
interspersed with groves of innumerable palm-trees; and the diligent natives celebrated, either
in verse or prose, the three hundred and sixty uses to which the trunk, the branches, the leaves,
the juice, and the fruit, were skilfully applied. Several manufactures, especially those of leather
and linen, employed the industry of a numerous people, and afforded valuable materials for
foreign trade; which appears, however, to have been conducted by the hands of strangers.
Babylon had been converted into a royal park; but near the ruins of the ancient capital, new
cities had successively arisen, and the populousness of the country was displayed in the
multitude of towns and villages, which were built of bricks dried in the sun, and strongly
cemented with bitumen; the natural and peculiar production of the Babylonian soil. While the
successors of Cyrus reigned over Asia, the province of Syria alone maintained, during a third
part of the year, the luxurious plenty of the table and household of the Great King. Four
considerable villages were assigned for the subsistence of his Indian dogs; eight hundred
stallions, and sixteen thousand mares, were constantly kept, at the expense of the country, for the
royal stables; and as the daily tribute, which was paid to the satrap, amounted to one English
bushel of silver, we may compute the annual revenue of Assyria at more than twelve hundred
thousand pounds sterling.
Chapter XXIV: The Retreat And Death Of Julian. -- Part III.
The fields of Assyria were devoted by Julian to the calamities of war; and the philosopher
retaliated on a guiltless people the acts of rapine and cruelty which had been committed by their
haughty master in the Roman provinces. The trembling Assyrians summoned the rivers to their
assistance; and completed, with their own hands, the ruin of their country. The roads were
rendered impracticable; a flood of waters was poured into the camp; and, during several days,
the troops of Julian were obliged to contend with the most discouraging hardships. But every
obstacle was surmounted by the perseverance of the legionaries, who were inured to toil as well
as to danger, and who felt themselves animated by the spirit of their leader. The damage was
gradually repaired; the waters were restored to their proper channels; whole groves of palm-trees
were cut down, and placed along the broken parts of the road; and the army passed over the
broad and deeper canals, on bridges of floating rafts, which were supported by the help of
bladders. Two cities of Assyria presumed to resist the arms of a Roman emperor: and they both
paid the severe penalty of their rashness. At the distance of fifty miles from the royal residence
of Ctesiphon, Perisabor, * or Anbar, held the second rank in the province; a city, large, populous,
and well fortified, surrounded with a double wall, almost encompassed by a branch of the
Euphrates, and defended by the valor of a numerous garrison. The exhortations of Hormisdas
were repulsed with contempt; and the ears of the Persian prince were wounded by a just
reproach, that, unmindful of his royal birth, he conducted an army of strangers against his king
and country. The Assyrians maintained their loyalty by a skilful, as well as vigorous, defence; till
the lucky stroke of a battering-ram, having opened a large breach, by shattering one of the angles
of the wall, they hastily retired into the fortifications of the interior citadel. The soldiers of
Julian rushed impetuously into the town, and after the full gratification of every military
appetite, Perisabor was reduced to ashes; and the engines which assaulted the citadel were
planted on the ruins of the smoking houses. The contest was continued by an incessant and
mutual discharge of missile weapons; and the superiority which the Romans might derive from
the mechanical powers of their balistæ and catapultæ was counterbalanced by the advantage of
the ground on the side of the besieged. But as soon as an Helepolis had been constructed, which
could engage on equal terms with the loftiest ramparts, the tremendous aspect of a moving
turret, that would leave no hope of resistance or mercy, terrified the defenders of the citadel into
an humble submission; and the place was surrendered only two days after Julian first appeared
under the walls of Perisabor. Two thousand five hundred persons, of both sexes, the feeble
remnant of a flourishing people, were permitted to retire; the plentiful magazines of corn, of
arms, and of splendid furniture, were partly distributed among the troops, and partly reserved for
the public service; the useless stores were destroyed by fire or thrown into the stream of the
Euphrates; and the fate of Amida was revenged by the total ruin of Perisabor.
The city or rather fortress, of Maogamalcha, which was defended by sixteen large towers, a deep
ditch, and two strong and solid walls of brick and bitumen, appears to have been constructed at
the distance of eleven miles, as the safeguard of the capital of Persia. The emperor, apprehensive
of leaving such an important fortress in his rear, immediately formed the siege of Maogamalcha;
and the Roman army was distributed, for that purpose, into three divisions. Victor, at the head of
the cavalry, and of a detachment of heavy-armed foot, was ordered to clear the country, as far as
the banks of the Tigris, and the suburbs of Ctesiphon. The conduct of the attack was assumed by
Julian himself, who seemed to place his whole dependence in the military engines which he
erected against the walls; while he secretly contrived a more efficacious method of introducing
his troops into the heart of the city Under the direction of Nevitta and Dagalaiphus, the trenches
were opened at a considerable distance, and gradually prolonged as far as the edge of the ditch.
The ditch was speedily filled with earth; and, by the incessant labor of the troops, a mine was
carried under the foundations of the walls, and sustained, at sufficient intervals, by props of
timber. Three chosen cohorts, advancing in a single file, silently explored the dark and
dangerous passage; till their intrepid leader whispered back the intelligence, that he was ready to
issue from his confinement into the streets of the hostile city. Julian checked their ardor, that he
might insure their success; and immediately diverted the attention of the garrison, by the tumult
and clamor of a general assault. The Persians, who, from their walls, contemptuously beheld the
progress of an impotent attack, celebrated with songs of triumph the glory of Sapor; and
ventured to assure the emperor, that he might ascend the starry mansion of Ormusd, before he
could hope to take the impregnable city of Maogamalcha. The city was already taken. History
has recorded the name of a private soldier the first who ascended from the mine into a deserted
tower. The passage was widened by his companions, who pressed forwards with impatient valor.
Fifteen hundred enemies were already in the midst of the city. The astonished garrison
abandoned the walls, and their only hope of safety; the gates were instantly burst open; and the
revenge of the soldier, unless it were suspended by lust or avarice, was satiated by an
undistinguishing massacre. The governor, who had yielded on a promise of mercy, was burnt
alive, a few days afterwards, on a charge of having uttered some disrespectful words against the
honor of Prince Hormisdas. * The fortifications were razed to the ground; and not a vestige was
left, that the city of Maogamalcha had ever existed. The neighborhood of the capital of Persia
was adorned with three stately palaces, laboriously enriched with every production that could
gratify the luxury and pride of an Eastern monarch. The pleasant situation of the gardens along
the banks of the Tigris, was improved, according to the Persian taste, by the symmetry of
flowers, fountains, and shady walks: and spacious parks were enclosed for the reception of the
bears, lions, and wild boars, which were maintained at a considerable expense for the pleasure of
the royal chase. The park walls were broken down, the savage game was abandoned to the darts
of the soldiers, and the palaces of Sapor were reduced to ashes, by the command of the Roman
emperor. Julian, on this occasion, showed himself ignorant, or careless, of the laws of civility,
which the prudence and refinement of polished ages have established between hostile princes.
Yet these wanton ravages need not excite in our breasts any vehement emotions of pity or
resentment. A simple, naked statue, finished by the hand of a Grecian artist, is of more genuine
value than all these rude and costly monuments of Barbaric labor; and, if we are more deeply
affected by the ruin of a palace than by the conflagration of a cottage, our humanity must have
formed a very erroneous estimate of the miseries of human life.
Julian was an object of hatred and terror to the Persian and the painters of that nation
represented the invader of their country under the emblem of a furious lion, who vomited from
his mouth a consuming fire. To his friends and soldiers the philosophic hero appeared in a more
amiable light; and his virtues were never more conspicuously displayed, than in the last and
most active period of his life. He practised, without effort, and almost without merit, the habitual
qualities of temperance and sobriety. According to the dictates of that artificial wisdom, which
assumes an absolute dominion over the mind and body, he sternly refused himself the
indulgence of the most natural appetites. In the warm climate of Assyria, which solicited a
luxurious people to the gratification of every sensual desire, a youthful conqueror preserved his
chastity pure and inviolate; nor was Julian ever tempted, even by a motive of curiosity, to visit
his female captives of exquisite beauty, who, instead of resisting his power, would have
disputed with each other the honor of his embraces. With the same firmness that he resisted the
allurements of love, he sustained the hardships of war. When the Romans marched through the
flat and flooded country, their sovereign, on foot, at the head of his legions, shared their fatigues
and animated their diligence. In every useful labor, the hand of Julian was prompt and strenuous;
and the Imperial purple was wet and dirty as the coarse garment of the meanest soldier. The two
sieges allowed him some remarkable opportunities of signalizing his personal valor, which, in
the improved state of the military art, can seldom be exerted by a prudent general. The emperor
stood before the citadel before the citadel of Perisabor, insensible of his extreme danger, and
encouraged his troops to burst open the gates of iron, till he was almost overwhelmed under a
cloud of missile weapons and huge stones, that were directed against his person. As he examined
the exterior fortifications of Maogamalcha, two Persians, devoting themselves for their country,
suddenly rushed upon him with drawn cimeters: the emperor dexterously received their blows on
his uplifted shield; and, with a steady and well-aimed thrust, laid one of his adversaries dead at
his feet. The esteem of a prince who possesses the virtues which he approves, is the noblest
recompense of a deserving subject; and the authority which Julian derived from his personal
merit, enabled him to revive and enforce the rigor of ancient discipline. He punished with death
or ignominy the misbehavior of three troops of horse, who, in a skirmish with the Surenas, had
lost their honor and one of their standards: and he distinguished with obsidional crowns the
valor of the foremost soldiers, who had ascended into the city of Maogamalcha. After the siege
of Perisabor, the firmness of the emperor was exercised by the insolent avarice of the army, who
loudly complained, that their services were rewarded by a trifling donative of one hundred
pieces of silver. His just indignation was expressed in the grave and manly language of a Roman.
"Riches are the object of your desires; those riches are in the hands of the Persians; and the
spoils of this fruitful country are proposed as the prize of your valor and discipline. Believe me,"
added Julian, "the Roman republic, which formerly possessed such immense treasures, is now
reduced to want and wretchedness once our princes have been persuaded, by weak and interested
ministers, to purchase with gold the tranquillity of the Barbarians. The revenue is exhausted; the
cities are ruined; the provinces are dispeopled. For myself, the only inheritance that I have
received from my royal ancestors is a soul incapable of fear; and as long as I am convinced that
every real advantage is seated in the mind, I shall not blush to acknowledge an honorable
poverty, which, in the days of ancient virtue, was considered as the glory of Fabricius. That
glory, and that virtue, may be your own, if you will listen to the voice of Heaven and of your
leader. But if you will rashly persist, if you are determined to renew the shameful and
mischievous examples of old seditions, proceed. As it becomes an emperor who has filled the
first rank among men, I am prepared to die, standing; and to despise a precarious life, which,
every hour, may depend on an accidental fever. If I have been found unworthy of the command,
there are now among you, (I speak it with pride and pleasure,) there are many chiefs whose merit
and experience are equal to the conduct of the most important war. Such has been the temper of
my reign, that I can retire, without regret, and without apprehension, to the obscurity of a private
station" The modest resolution of Julian was answered by the unanimous applause and cheerful
obedience of the Romans, who declared their confidence of victory, while they fought under the
banners of their heroic prince. Their courage was kindled by his frequent and familiar
asseverations, (for such wishes were the oaths of Julian,) "So may I reduce the Persians under
the yoke!" "Thus may I restore the strength and splendor of the republic!" The love of fame was
the ardent passion of his soul: but it was not before he trampled on the ruins of Maogamalcha,
that he allowed himself to say, "We have now provided some materials for the sophist of
Antioch."
The successful valor of Julian had triumphed over all the obstacles that opposed his march to the
gates of Ctesiphon. But the reduction, or even the siege, of the capital of Persia, was still at a
distance: nor can the military conduct of the emperor be clearly apprehended, without a
knowledge of the country which was the theatre of his bold and skilful operations. Twenty miles
to the south of Bagdad, and on the eastern bank of the Tigris, the curiosity of travellers has
observed some ruins of the palaces of Ctesiphon, which, in the time of Julian, was a great and
populous city. The name and glory of the adjacent Seleucia were forever extinguished; and the
only remaining quarter of that Greek colony had resumed, with the Assyrian language and
manners, the primitive appellation of Coche. Coche was situate on the western side of the Tigris;
but it was naturally considered as a suburb of Ctesiphon, with which we may suppose it to have
been connected by a permanent bridge of boats. The united parts contribute to form the common
epithet of Al Modain, the cities, which the Orientals have bestowed on the winter residence of
the Sassinades; and the whole circumference of the Persian capital was strongly fortified by the
waters of the river, by lofty walls, and by impracticable morasses. Near the ruins of Seleucia, the
camp of Julian was fixed, and secured, by a ditch and rampart, against the sallies of the
numerous and enterprising garrison of Coche. In this fruitful and pleasant country, the Romans
were plentifully supplied with water and forage: and several forts, which might have
embarrassed the motions of the army, submitted, after some resistance, to the efforts of their
valor. The fleet passed from the Euphrates into an artificial derivation of that river, which pours
a copious and navigable stream into the Tigris, at a small distance below the great city. If they
had followed this royal canal, which bore the name of Nahar-Malcha, the intermediate situation
of Coche would have separated the fleet and army of Julian; and the rash attempt of steering
against the current of the Tigris, and forcing their way through the midst of a hostile capital,
must have been attended with the total destruction of the Roman navy. The prudence of the
emperor foresaw the danger, and provided the remedy. As he had minutely studied the
operations of Trajan in the same country, he soon recollected that his warlike predecessor had
dug a new and navigable canal, which, leaving Coche on the right hand, conveyed the waters of
the Nahar-Malcha into the river Tigris, at some distance above the cities. From the information
of the peasants, Julian ascertained the vestiges of this ancient work, which were almost
obliterated by design or accident. By the indefatigable labor of the soldiers, a broad and deep
channel was speedily prepared for the reception of the Euphrates. A strong dike was constructed
to interrupt the ordinary current of the Nahar-Malcha: a flood of waters rushed impetuously into
their new bed; and the Roman fleet, steering their triumphant course into the Tigris, derided the
vain and ineffectual barriers which the Persians of Ctesiphon had erected to oppose their
passage.
As it became necessary to transport the Roman army over the Tigris, another labor presented
itself, of less toil, but of more danger, than the preceding expedition. The stream was broad and
rapid; the ascent steep and difficult; and the intrenchments which had been formed on the ridge
of the opposite bank, were lined with a numerous army of heavy cuirassiers, dexterous archers,
and huge elephants; who (according to the extravagant hyperbole of Libanius) could trample
with the same ease a field of corn, or a legion of Romans. In the presence of such an enemy, the
construction of a bridge was impracticable; and the intrepid prince, who instantly seized the only
possible expedient, concealed his design, till the moment of execution, from the knowledge of
the Barbarians, of his own troops, and even of his generals themselves. Under the specious
pretence of examining the state of the magazines, fourscore vessels * were gradually unladen;
and a select detachment, apparently destined for some secret expedition, was ordered to stand to
their arms on the first signal. Julian disguised the silent anxiety of his own mind with smiles of
confidence and joy; and amused the hostile nations with the spectacle of military games, which
he insultingly celebrated under the walls of Coche. The day was consecrated to pleasure; but, as
soon as the hour of supper was passed, the emperor summoned the generals to his tent, and
acquainted them that he had fixed that night for the passage of the Tigris. They stood in silent
and respectful astonishment; but, when the venerable Sallust assumed the privilege of his age
and experience, the rest of the chiefs supported with freedom the weight of his prudent
remonstrances. Julian contented himself with observing, that conquest and safety depended on
the attempt; that instead of diminishing, the number of their enemies would be increased, by
successive reenforcements; and that a longer delay would neither contract the breadth of the
stream, nor level the height of the bank. The signal was instantly given, and obeyed; the most
impatient of the legionaries leaped into five vessels that lay nearest to the bank; and as they plied
their oars with intrepid diligence, they were lost, after a few moments, in the darkness of the
night. A flame arose on the opposite side; and Julian, who too clearly understood that his
foremost vessels, in attempting to land, had been fired by the enemy, dexterously converted their
extreme danger into a presage of victory. "Our fellow-soldiers," he eagerly exclaimed, "are
already masters of the bank; see -- they make the appointed signal; let us hasten to emulate and
assist their courage." The united and rapid motion of a great fleet broke the violence of the
current, and they reached the eastern shore of the Tigris with sufficient speed to extinguish the
flames, and rescue their adventurous companions. The difficulties of a steep and lofty ascent
were increased by the weight of armor, and the darkness of the night. A shower of stones, darts,
and fire, was incessantly discharged on the heads of the assailants; who, after an arduous
struggle, climbed the bank and stood victorious upon the rampart. As soon as they possessed a
more equal field, Julian, who, with his light infantry, had led the attack, darted through the
ranks a skilful and experienced eye: his bravest soldiers, according to the precepts of Homer,
were distributed in the front and rear: and all the trumpets of the Imperial army sounded to
battle. The Romans, after sending up a military shout, advanced in measured steps to the
animating notes of martial music; launched their formidable javelins; and rushed forwards with
drawn swords, to deprive the Barbarians, by a closer onset, of the advantage of their missile
weapons. The whole engagement lasted above twelve hours; till the gradual retreat of the
Persians was changed into a disorderly flight, of which the shameful example was given by the
principal leader, and the Surenas himself. They were pursued to the gates of Ctesiphon; and the
conquerors might have entered the dismayed city, if their general, Victor, who was dangerously
wounded with an arrow, had not conjured them to desist from a rash attempt, which must be
fatal, if it were not successful. On their side, the Romans acknowledged the loss of only
seventy-five men; while they affirmed, that the Barbarians had left on the field of battle two
thousand five hundred, or even six thousand, of their bravest soldiers. The spoil was such as
might be expected from the riches and luxury of an Oriental camp; large quantities of silver and
gold, splendid arms and trappings, and beds and tables of massy silver. * The victorious emperor
distributed, as the rewards of valor, some honorable gifts, civic, and mural, and naval crowns;
which he, and perhaps he alone, esteemed more precious than the wealth of Asia. A solemn
sacrifice was offered to the god of war, but the appearances of the victims threatened the most
inauspicious events; and Julian soon discovered, by less ambiguous signs, that he had now
reached the term of his prosperity.
On the second day after the battle, the domestic guards, the Jovians and Herculians, and the
remaining troops, which composed near two thirds of the whole army, were securely wafted over
the Tigris. While the Persians beheld from the walls of Ctesiphon the desolation of the adjacent
country, Julian cast many an anxious look towards the North, in full expectation, that as he
himself had victoriously penetrated to the capital of Sapor, the march and junction of his
lieutenants, Sebastian and Procopius, would be executed with the same courage and diligence.
His expectations were disappointed by the treachery of the Armenian king, who permitted, and
most probably directed, the desertion of his auxiliary troops from the camp of the Romans; and
by the dissensions of the two generals, who were incapable of forming or executing any plan for
the public service. When the emperor had relinquished the hope of this important reenforcement,
he condescended to hold a council of war, and approved, after a full debate, the sentiment of
those generals, who dissuaded the siege of Ctesiphon, as a fruitless and pernicious undertaking.
It is not easy for us to conceive, by what arts of fortification a city thrice besieged and taken by
the predecessors of Julian could be rendered impregnable against an army of sixty thousand
Romans, commanded by a brave and experienced general, and abundantly supplied with ships,
provisions, battering engines, and military stores. But we may rest assured, from the love of
glory, and contempt of danger, which formed the character of Julian, that he was not
discouraged by any trivial or imaginary obstacles. At the very time when he declined the siege
of Ctesiphon, he rejected, with obstinacy and disdain, the most flattering offers of a negotiation
of peace. Sapor, who had been so long accustomed to the tardy ostentation of Constantius, was
surprised by the intrepid diligence of his successor. As far as the confines of India and Scythia,
the satraps of the distant provinces were ordered to assemble their troops, and to march, without
delay, to the assistance of their monarch. But their preparations were dilatory, their motions
slow; and before Sapor could lead an army into the field, he received the melancholy
intelligence of the devastation of Assyria, the ruin of his palaces, and the slaughter of his bravest
troops, who defended the passage of the Tigris. The pride of royalty was humbled in the dust; he
took his repasts on the ground; and the disorder of his hair expressed the grief and anxiety of his
mind. Perhaps he would not have refused to purchase, with one half of his kingdom, the safety of
the remainder; and he would have gladly subscribed himself, in a treaty of peace, the faithful and
dependent ally of the Roman conqueror. Under the pretence of private business, a minister of
rank and confidence was secretly despatched to embrace the knees of Hormisdas, and to request,
in the language of a suppliant, that he might be introduced into the presence of the emperor. The
Sassanian prince, whether he listened to the voice of pride or humanity, whether he consulted
the sentiments of his birth, or the duties of his situation, was equally inclined to promote a
salutary measure, which would terminate the calamities of Persia, and secure the triumph of
Rome. He was astonished by the inflexible firmness of a hero, who remembered, most
unfortunately for himself and for his country, that Alexander had uniformly rejected the
propositions of Darius. But as Julian was sensible, that the hope of a safe and honorable peace
might cool the ardor of his troops, he earnestly requested that Hormisdas would privately dismiss
the minister of Sapor, and conceal this dangerous temptation from the knowledge of the camp.
Chapter XXIV: The Retreat And Death Of Julian. -- Part IV.
The honor, as well as interest, of Julian, forbade him to consume his time under the impregnable
walls of Ctesiphon and as often as he defied the Barbarians, who defended the city, to meet him
on the open plain, they prudently replied, that if he desired to exercise his valor, he might seek
the army of the Great King. He felt the insult, and he accepted the advice. Instead of confining
his servile march to the banks of the Euphrates and Tigris, he resolved to imitate the adventurous
spirit of Alexander, and boldly to advance into the inland provinces, till he forced his rival to
contend with him, perhaps in the plains of Arbela, for the empire of Asia. The magnanimity of
Julian was applauded and betrayed, by the arts of a noble Persian, who, in the cause of his
country, had generously submitted to act a part full of danger, of falsehood, and of shame. With
a train of faithful followers, he deserted to the Imperial camp; exposed, in a specious tale, the
injuries which he had sustained; exaggerated the cruelty of Sapor, the discontent of the people,
and the weakness of the monarchy; and confidently offered himself as the hostage and guide of
the Roman march. The most rational grounds of suspicion were urged, without effect, by the
wisdom and experience of Hormisdas; and the credulous Julian, receiving the traitor into his
bosom, was persuaded to issue a hasty order, which, in the opinion of mankind, appeared to
arraign his prudence, and to endanger his safety. He destroyed, in a single hour, the whole navy,
which had been transported above five hundred miles, at so great an expense of toil, of treasure,
and of blood. Twelve, or, at the most, twenty-two small vessels were saved, to accompany, on
carriages, the march of the army, and to form occasional bridges for the passage of the rivers. A
supply of twenty days' provisions was reserved for the use of the soldiers; and the rest of the
magazines, with a fleet of eleven hundred vessels, which rode at anchor in the Tigris, were
abandoned to the flames, by the absolute command of the emperor. The Christian bishops,
Gregory and Augustin, insult the madness of the Apostate, who executed, with his own hands,
the sentence of divine justice. Their authority, of less weight, perhaps, in a military question, is
confirmed by the cool judgment of an experienced soldier, who was himself spectator of the
conflagration, and who could not disapprove the reluctant murmurs of the troops. Yet there are
not wanting some specious, and perhaps solid, reasons, which might justify the resolution of
Julian. The navigation of the Euphrates never ascended above Babylon, nor that of the Tigris
above Opis. The distance of the last-mentioned city from the Roman camp was not very
considerable: and Julian must soon have renounced the vain and impracticable attempt of
forcing upwards a great fleet against the stream of a rapid river, which in several places was
embarrassed by natural or artificial cataracts. The power of sails and oars was insufficient; it
became necessary to tow the ships against the current of the river; the strength of twenty
thousand soldiers was exhausted in this tedious and servile labor, and if the Romans continued to
march along the banks of the Tigris, they could only expect to return home without achieving
any enterprise worthy of the genius or fortune of their leader. If, on the contrary, it was advisable
to advance into the inland country, the destruction of the fleet and magazines was the only
measure which could save that valuable prize from the hands of the numerous and active troops
which might suddenly be poured from the gates of Ctesiphon. Had the arms of Julian been
victorious, we should now admire the conduct, as well as the courage, of a hero, who, by
depriving his soldiers of the hopes of a retreat, left them only the alternative of death or
conquest.
The cumbersome train of artillery and wagons, which retards the operations of a modern army,
were in a great measure unknown in the camps of the Romans. Yet, in every age, the
subsistence of sixty thousand men must have been one of the most important cares of a prudent
general; and that subsistence could only be drawn from his own or from the enemy's country.
Had it been possible for Julian to maintain a bridge of communication on the Tigris, and to
preserve the conquered places of Assyria, a desolated province could not afford any large or
regular supplies, in a season of the year when the lands were covered by the inundation of the
Euphrates, and the unwholesome air was darkened with swarms of innumerable insects. The
appearance of the hostile country was far more inviting. The extensive region that lies between
the River Tigris and the mountains of Media, was filled with villages and towns; and the fertile
soil, for the most part, was in a very improved state of cultivation. Julian might expect, that a
conqueror, who possessed the two forcible instruments of persuasion, steel and gold, would
easily procure a plentiful subsistence from the fears or avarice of the natives. But, on the
approach of the Romans, the rich and smiling prospect was instantly blasted. Wherever they
moved, the inhabitants deserted the open villages, and took shelter in the fortified towns; the
cattle was driven away; the grass and ripe corn were consumed with fire; and, as soon as the
flames had subsided which interrupted the march of Julian, he beheld the melancholy face of a
smoking and naked desert. This desperate but effectual method of defence can only be executed
by the enthusiasm of a people who prefer their independence to their property; or by the rigor of
an arbitrary government, which consults the public safety without submitting to their inclinations
the liberty of choice. On the present occasion the zeal and obedience of the Persians seconded
the commands of Sapor; and the emperor was soon reduced to the scanty stock of provisions,
which continually wasted in his hands. Before they were entirely consumed, he might still have
reached the wealthy and unwarlike cities of Ecbatana or Susa, by the effort of a rapid and
well-directed march; but he was deprived of this last resource by his ignorance of the roads, and
by the perfidy of his guides. The Romans wandered several days in the country to the eastward
of Bagdad; the Persian deserter, who had artfully led them into the spare, escaped from their
resentment; and his followers, as soon as they were put to the torture, confessed the secret of the
conspiracy. The visionary conquests of Hyrcania and India, which had so long amused, now
tormented, the mind of Julian. Conscious that his own imprudence was the cause of the public
distress, he anxiously balanced the hopes of safety or success, without obtaining a satisfactory
answer, either from gods or men. At length, as the only practicable measure, he embraced the
resolution of directing his steps towards the banks of the Tigris, with the design of saving the
army by a hasty march to the confines of Corduene; a fertile and friendly province, which
acknowledged the sovereignty of Rome. The desponding troops obeyed the signal of the retreat,
only seventy days after they had passed the Chaboras, with the sanguine expectation of
subverting the throne of Persia.
As long as the Romans seemed to advance into the country, their march was observed and
insulted from a distance, by several bodies of Persian cavalry; who, showing themselves
sometimes in loose, and sometimes in close order, faintly skirmished with the advanced guards.
These detachments were, however, supported by a much greater force; and the heads of the
columns were no sooner pointed towards the Tigris than a cloud of dust arose on the plain. The
Romans, who now aspired only to the permission of a safe and speedy retreat, endeavored to
persuade themselves, that this formidable appearance was occasioned by a troop of wild asses,
or perhaps by the approach of some friendly Arabs. They halted, pitched their tents, fortified
their camp, passed the whole night in continual alarms; and discovered at the dawn of day, that
they were surrounded by an army of Persians. This army, which might be considered only as the
van of the Barbarians, was soon followed by the main body of cuirassiers, archers, and
elephants, commanded by Meranes, a general of rank and reputation. He was accompanied by
two of the king's sons, and many of the principal satraps; and fame and expectation exaggerated
the strength of the remaining powers, which slowly advanced under the conduct of Sapor
himself. As the Romans continued their march, their long array, which was forced to bend or
divide, according to the varieties of the ground, afforded frequent and favorable opportunities to
their vigilant enemies. The Persians repeatedly charged with fury; they were repeatedly repulsed
with firmness; and the action at Maronga, which almost deserved the name of a battle, was
marked by a considerable loss of satraps and elephants, perhaps of equal value in the eyes of
their monarch. These splendid advantages were not obtained without an adequate slaughter on
the side of the Romans: several officers of distinction were either killed or wounded; and the
emperor himself, who, on all occasions of danger, inspired and guided the valor of his troops,
was obliged to expose his person, and exert his abilities. The weight of offensive and defensive
arms, which still constituted the strength and safety of the Romans, disabled them from making
any long or effectual pursuit; and as the horsemen of the East were trained to dart their javelins,
and shoot their arrows, at full speed, and in every possible direction, the cavalry of Persia was
never more formidable than in the moment of a rapid and disorderly flight. But the most certain
and irreparable loss of the Romans was that of time. The hardy veterans, accustomed to the cold
climate of Gaul and Germany, fainted under the sultry heat of an Assyrian summer; their vigor
was exhausted by the incessant repetition of march and combat; and the progress of the army
was suspended by the precautions of a slow and dangerous retreat, in the presence of an active
enemy. Every day, every hour, as the supply diminished, the value and price of subsistence
increased in the Roman camp. Julian, who always contented himself with such food as a hungry
soldier would have disdained, distributed, for the use of the troops, the provisions of the Imperial
household, and whatever could be spared, from the sumpter-horses, of the tribunes and generals.
But this feeble relief served only to aggravate the sense of the public distress; and the Romans
began to entertain the most gloomy apprehensions that, before they could reach the frontiers of
the empire, they should all perish, either by famine, or by the sword of the Barbarians.
While Julian struggled with the almost insuperable difficulties of his situation, the silent hours
of the night were still devoted to study and contemplation. Whenever he closed his eyes in short
and interrupted slumbers, his mind was agitated with painful anxiety; nor can it be thought
surprising, that the Genius of the empire should once more appear before him, covering with a
funeral veil his head, and his horn of abundance, and slowly retiring from the Imperial tent. The
monarch started from his couch, and stepping forth to refresh his wearied spirits with the
coolness of the midnight air, he beheld a fiery meteor, which shot athwart the sky, and suddenly
vanished. Julian was convinced that he had seen the menacing countenance of the god of war;
the council which he summoned, of Tuscan Haruspices, unanimously pronounced that he should
abstain from action; but on this occasion, necessity and reason were more prevalent than
superstition; and the trumpets sounded at the break of day. The army marched through a hilly
country; and the hills had been secretly occupied by the Persians. Julian led the van with the skill
and attention of a consummate general; he was alarmed by the intelligence that his rear was
suddenly attacked. The heat of the weather had tempted him to lay aside his cuirass; but he
snatched a shield from one of his attendants, and hastened, with a sufficient reenforcement, to
the relief of the rear-guard. A similar danger recalled the intrepid prince to the defence of the
front; and, as he galloped through the columns, the centre of the left was attacked, and almost
overpowered by the furious charge of the Persian cavalry and elephants. This huge body was
soon defeated, by the well-timed evolution of the light infantry, who aimed their weapons, with
dexterity and effect, against the backs of the horsemen, and the legs of the elephants. The
Barbarians fled; and Julian, who was foremost in every danger, animated the pursuit with his
voice and gestures. His trembling guards, scattered and oppressed by the disorderly throng of
friends and enemies, reminded their fearless sovereign that he was without armor; and conjured
him to decline the fall of the impending ruin. As they exclaimed, a cloud of darts and arrows
was discharged from the flying squadrons; and a javelin, after razing the skin of his arm,
transpierced the ribs, and fixed in the inferior part of the liver. Julian attempted to draw the
deadly weapon from his side; but his fingers were cut by the sharpness of the steel, and he fell
senseless from his horse. His guards flew to his relief; and the wounded emperor was gently
raised from the ground, and conveyed out of the tumult of the battle into an adjacent tent. The
report of the melancholy event passed from rank to rank; but the grief of the Romans inspired
them with invincible valor, and the desire of revenge. The bloody and obstinate conflict was
maintained by the two armies, till they were separated by the total darkness of the night. The
Persians derived some honor from the advantage which they obtained against the left wing,
where Anatolius, master of the offices, was slain, and the præfect Sallust very narrowly escaped.
But the event of the day was adverse to the Barbarians. They abandoned the field; their two
generals, Meranes and Nohordates, fifty nobles or satraps, and a multitude of their bravest
soldiers; and the success of the Romans, if Julian had survived, might have been improved into a
decisive and useful victory.
The first words that Julian uttered, after his recovery from the fainting fit into which he had been
thrown by loss of blood, were expressive of his martial spirit. He called for his horse and arms,
and was impatient to rush into the battle. His remaining strength was exhausted by the painful
effort; and the surgeons, who examined his wound, discovered the symptoms of approaching
death. He employed the awful moments with the firm temper of a hero and a sage; the
philosophers who had accompanied him in this fatal expedition, compared the tent of Julian with
the prison of Socrates; and the spectators, whom duty, or friendship, or curiosity, had assembled
round his couch, listened with respectful grief to the funeral oration of their dying emperor.
"Friends and fellow-soldiers, the seasonable period of my departure is now arrived, and I
discharge, with the cheerfulness of a ready debtor, the demands of nature. I have learned from
philosophy, how much the soul is more excellent than the body; and that the separation of the
nobler substance should be the subject of joy, rather than of affliction. I have learned from
religion, that an early death has often been the reward of piety; and I accept, as a favor of the
gods, the mortal stroke that secures me from the danger of disgracing a character, which has
hitherto been supported by virtue and fortitude. I die without remorse, as I have lived without
guilt. I am pleased to reflect on the innocence of my private life; and I can affirm with
confidence, that the supreme authority, that emanation of the Divine Power, has been preserved
in my hands pure and immaculate. Detesting the corrupt and destructive maxims of despotism, I
have considered the happiness of the people as the end of government. Submitting my actions to
the laws of prudence, of justice, and of moderation, I have trusted the event to the care of
Providence. Peace was the object of my counsels, as long as peace was consistent with the
public welfare; but when the imperious voice of my country summoned me to arms, I exposed
my person to the dangers of war, with the clear foreknowledge (which I had acquired from the
art of divination) that I was destined to fall by the sword. I now offer my tribute of gratitude to
the Eternal Being, who has not suffered me to perish by the cruelty of a tyrant, by the secret
dagger of conspiracy, or by the slow tortures of lingering disease. He has given me, in the midst
of an honorable career, a splendid and glorious departure from this world; and I hold it equally
absurd, equally base, to solicit, or to decline, the stroke of fate. This much I have attempted to
say; but my strength fails me, and I feel the approach of death. I shall cautiously refrain from any
word that may tend to influence your suffrages in the election of an emperor. My choice might
be imprudent or injudicious; and if it should not be ratified by the consent of the army, it might
be fatal to the person whom I should recommend. I shall only, as a good citizen, express my
hopes, that the Romans may be blessed with the government of a virtuous sovereign." After this
discourse, which Julian pronounced in a firm and gentle tone of voice, he distributed, by a
military testament, the remains of his private fortune; and making some inquiry why Anatolius
was not present, he understood, from the answer of Sallust, that Anatolius was killed; and
bewailed, with amiable inconsistency, the loss of his friend. At the same time he reproved the
immoderate grief of the spectators; and conjured them not to disgrace, by unmanly tears, the fate
of a prince, who in a few moments would be united with heaven, and with the stars. The
spectators were silent; and Julian entered into a metaphysical argument with the philosophers
Priscus and Maximus, on the nature of the soul. The efforts which he made, of mind as well as
body, most probably hastened his death. His wound began to bleed with fresh violence; his
respiration was embarrassed by the swelling of the veins; he called for a draught of cold water,
and, as soon as he had drank it, expired without pain, about the hour of midnight. Such was the
end of that extraordinary man, in the thirty-second year of his age, after a reign of one year and
about eight months, from the death of Constantius. In his last moments he displayed, perhaps
with some ostentation, the love of virtue and of fame, which had been the ruling passions of his
life.
The triumph of Christianity, and the calamities of the empire, may, in some measure, be ascribed
to Julian himself, who had neglected to secure the future execution of his designs, by the timely
and judicious nomination of an associate and successor. But the royal race of Constantius
Chlorus was reduced to his own person; and if he entertained any serious thoughts of investing
with the purple the most worthy among the Romans, he was diverted from his resolution by the
difficulty of the choice, the jealousy of power, the fear of ingratitude, and the natural
presumption of health, of youth, and of prosperity. His unexpected death left the empire without
a master, and without an heir, in a state of perplexity and danger, which, in the space of
fourscore years, had never been experienced, since the election of Diocletian. In a government
which had almost forgotten the distinction of pure and noble blood, the superiority of birth was
of little moment; the claims of official rank were accidental and precarious; and the candidates,
who might aspire to ascend the vacant throne could be supported only by the consciousness of
personal merit, or by the hopes of popular favor. But the situation of a famished army,
encompassed on all sides by a host of Barbarians, shortened the moments of grief and
deliberation. In this scene of terror and distress, the body of the deceased prince, according to his
own directions, was decently embalmed; and, at the dawn of day, the generals convened a
military senate, at which the commanders of the legions, and the officers both of cavalry and
infantry, were invited to assist. Three or four hours of the night had not passed away without
some secret cabals; and when the election of an emperor was proposed, the spirit of faction
began to agitate the assembly. Victor and Arinthæus collected the remains of the court of
Constantius; the friends of Julian attached themselves to the Gallic chiefs, Dagalaiphus and
Nevitta; and the most fatal consequences might be apprehended from the discord of two
factions, so opposite in their character and interest, in their maxims of government, and perhaps
in their religious principles. The superior virtues of Sallust could alone reconcile their divisions,
and unite their suffrages; and the venerable præfect would immediately have been declared the
successor of Julian, if he himself, with sincere and modest firmness, had not alleged his age and
infirmities, so unequal to the weight of the diadem. The generals, who were surprised and
perplexed by his refusal, showed some disposition to adopt the salutary advice of an inferior
officer, that they should act as they would have acted in the absence of the emperor; that they
should exert their abilities to extricate the army from the present distress; and, if they were
fortunate enough to reach the confines of Mesopotamia, they should proceed with united and
deliberate counsels in the election of a lawful sovereign. While they debated, a few voices
saluted Jovian, who was no more than first of the domestics, with the names of Emperor and
Augustus. The tumultuary acclamation * was instantly repeated by the guards who surrounded
the tent, and passed, in a few minutes, to the extremities of the line. The new prince, astonished
with his own fortune was hastily invested with the Imperial ornaments, and received an oath of
fidelity from the generals, whose favor and protection he so lately solicited. The strongest
recommendation of Jovian was the merit of his father, Count Varronian, who enjoyed, in
honorable retirement, the fruit of his long services. In the obscure freedom of a private station,
the son indulged his taste for wine and women; yet he supported, with credit, the character of a
Christian and a soldier. Without being conspicuous for any of the ambitious qualifications
which excite the admiration and envy of mankind, the comely person of Jovian, his cheerful
temper, and familiar wit, had gained the affection of his fellow-soldiers; and the generals of both
parties acquiesced in a popular election, which had not been conducted by the arts of their
enemies. The pride of this unexpected elevation was moderated by the just apprehension, that
the same day might terminate the life and reign of the new emperor. The pressing voice of
necessity was obeyed without delay; and the first orders issued by Jovian, a few hours after his
predecessor had expired, were to prosecute a march, which could alone extricate the Romans
from their actual distress.
Chapter XXIV: The Retreat And Death Of Julian. -- Part V.
The esteem of an enemy is most sincerely expressed by his fears; and the degree of fear may be
accurately measured by the joy with which he celebrates his deliverance. The welcome news of
the death of Julian, which a deserter revealed to the camp of Sapor, inspired the desponding
monarch with a sudden confidence of victory. He immediately detached the royal cavalry,
perhaps the ten thousand Immortals, to second and support the pursuit; and discharged the
whole weight of his united forces on the rear-guard of the Romans. The rear-guard was thrown
into disorder; the renowned legions, which derived their titles from Diocletian, and his warlike
colleague, were broke and trampled down by the elephants; and three tribunes lost their lives in
attempting to stop the flight of their soldiers. The battle was at length restored by the persevering
valor of the Romans; the Persians were repulsed with a great slaughter of men and elephants;
and the army, after marching and fighting a long summer's day, arrived, in the evening, at
Samara, on the banks of the Tigris, about one hundred miles above Ctesiphon. On the ensuing
day, the Barbarians, instead of harassing the march, attacked the camp, of Jovian; which had
been seated in a deep and sequestered valley. From the hills, the archers of Persia insulted and
annoyed the wearied legionaries; and a body of cavalry, which had penetrated with desperate
courage through the Prætorian gate, was cut in pieces, after a doubtful conflict, near the Imperial
tent. In the succeeding night, the camp of Carche was protected by the lofty dikes of the river;
and the Roman army, though incessantly exposed to the vexatious pursuit of the Saracens,
pitched their tents near the city of Dura, four days after the death of Julian. The Tigris was still
on their left; their hopes and provisions were almost consumed; and the impatient soldiers, who
had fondly persuaded themselves that the frontiers of the empire were not far distant, requested
their new sovereign, that they might be permitted to hazard the passage of the river. With the
assistance of his wisest officers, Jovian endeavored to check their rashness; by representing, that
if they possessed sufficient skill and vigor to stem the torrent of a deep and rapid stream, they
would only deliver themselves naked and defenceless to the Barbarians, who had occupied the
opposite banks, Yielding at length to their clamorous importunities, he consented, with
reluctance, that five hundred Gauls and Germans, accustomed from their infancy to the waters of
the Rhine and Danube, should attempt the bold adventure, which might serve either as an
encouragement, or as a warning, for the rest of the army. In the silence of the night, they swam
the Tigris, surprised an unguarded post of the enemy, and displayed at the dawn of day the signal
of their resolution and fortune. The success of this trial disposed the emperor to listen to the
promises of his architects, who propose to construct a floating bridge of the inflated skins of
sheep, oxen, and goats, covered with a floor of earth and fascines. Two important days were
spent in the ineffectual labor; and the Romans, who already endured the miseries of famine, cast
a look of despair on the Tigris, and upon the Barbarians; whose numbers and obstinacy increased
with the distress of the Imperial army.
In this hopeless condition, the fainting spirits of the Romans were revived by the sound of peace.
The transient presumption of Sapor had vanished: he observed, with serious concern, that, in the
repetition of doubtful combats, he had lost his most faithful and intrepid nobles, his bravest
troops, and the greatest part of his train of elephants: and the experienced monarch feared to
provoke the resistance of despair, the vicissitudes of fortune, and the unexhausted powers of the
Roman empire; which might soon advance to relieve, or to revenge, the successor of Julian. The
Surenas himself, accompanied by another satrap, * appeared in the camp of Jovian; and
declared, that the clemency of his sovereign was not averse to signify the conditions on which he
would consent to spare and to dismiss the Cæsar with the relics of his captive army. The hopes
of safety subdued the firmness of the Romans; the emperor was compelled, by the advice of his
council, and the cries of his soldiers, to embrace the offer of peace; and the præfect Sallust was
immediately sent, with the general Arinthæus, to understand the pleasure of the Great King. The
crafty Persian delayed, under various pretenses, the conclusion of the agreement; started
difficulties, required explanations, suggested expedients, receded from his concessions,
increased his demands, and wasted four days in the arts of negotiation, till he had consumed the
stock of provisions which yet remained in the camp of the Romans. Had Jovian been capable of
executing a bold and prudent measure, he would have continued his march, with unremitting
diligence; the progress of the treaty would have suspended the attacks of the Barbarians; and,
before the expiration of the fourth day, he might have safely reached the fruitful province of
Corduene, at the distance only of one hundred miles. The irresolute emperor, instead of
breaking through the toils of the enemy, expected his fate with patient resignation; and accepted
the humiliating conditions of peace, which it was no longer in his power to refuse. The five
provinces beyond the Tigris, which had been ceded by the grandfather of Sapor, were restored to
the Persian monarchy. He acquired, by a single article, the impregnable city of Nisibis; which
had sustained, in three successive sieges, the effort of his arms. Singara, and the castle of the
Moors, one of the strongest places of Mesopotamia, were likewise dismembered from the
empire. It was considered as an indulgence, that the inhabitants of those fortresses were
permitted to retire with their effects; but the conqueror rigorously insisted, that the Romans
should forever abandon the king and kingdom of Armenia. § A peace, or rather a long truce, of
thirty years, was stipulated between the hostile nations; the faith of the treaty was ratified by
solemn oaths and religious ceremonies; and hostages of distinguished rank were reciprocally
delivered to secure the performance of the conditions.
The sophist of Antioch, who saw with indignation the sceptre of his hero in the feeble hand of a
Christian successor, professes to admire the moderation of Sapor, in contenting himself with so
small a portion of the Roman empire. If he had stretched as far as the Euphrates the claims of his
ambition, he might have been secure, says Libanius, of not meeting with a refusal. If he had
fixed, as the boundary of Persia, the Orontes, the Cydnus, the Sangarius, or even the Thracian
Bosphorus, flatterers would not have been wanting in the court of Jovian to convince the timid
monarch, that his remaining provinces would still afford the most ample gratifications of power
and luxury. Without adopting in its full force this malicious insinuation, we must acknowledge,
that the conclusion of so ignominious a treaty was facilitated by the private ambition of Jovian.
The obscure domestic, exalted to the throne by fortune, rather than by merit, was impatient to
escape from the hands of the Persians, that he might prevent the designs of Procopius, who
commanded the army of Mesopotamia, and establish his doubtful reign over the legions and
provinces which were still ignorant of the hasty and tumultuous choice of the camp beyond the
Tigris. In the neighborhood of the same river, at no very considerable distance from the fatal
station of Dura, the ten thousand Greeks, without generals, or guides, or provisions, were
abandoned, above twelve hundred miles from their native country, to the resentment of a
victorious monarch. The difference of their conduct and success depended much more on their
character than on their situation. Instead of tamely resigning themselves to the secret
deliberations and private views of a single person, the united councils of the Greeks were
inspired by the generous enthusiasm of a popular assembly; where the mind of each citizen is
filled with the love of glory, the pride of freedom, and the contempt of death. Conscious of their
superiority over the Barbarians in arms and discipline, they disdained to yield, they refused to
capitulate: every obstacle was surmounted by their patience, courage, and military skill; and the
memorable retreat of the ten thousand exposed and insulted the weakness of the Persian
monarchy.
As the price of his disgraceful concessions, the emperor might perhaps have stipulated, that the
camp of the hungry Romans should be plentifully supplied; and that they should be permitted to
pass the Tigris on the bridge which was constructed by the hands of the Persians. But, if Jovian
presumed to solicit those equitable terms, they were sternly refused by the haughty tyrant of the
East, whose clemency had pardoned the invaders of his country. The Saracens sometimes
intercepted the stragglers of the march; but the generals and troops of Sapor respected the
cessation of arms; and Jovian was suffered to explore the most convenient place for the passage
of the river. The small vessels, which had been saved from the conflagration of the fleet,
performed the most essential service. They first conveyed the emperor and his favorites; and
afterwards transported, in many successive voyages, a great part of the army. But, as every man
was anxious for his personal safety, and apprehensive of being left on the hostile shore, the
soldiers, who were too impatient to wait the slow returns of the boats, boldly ventured
themselves on light hurdles, or inflated skins; and, drawing after them their horses, attempted,
with various success, to swim across the river. Many of these daring adventurers were swallowed
by the waves; many others, who were carried along by the violence of the stream, fell an easy
prey to the avarice or cruelty of the wild Arabs: and the loss which the army sustained in the
passage of the Tigris, was not inferior to the carnage of a day of battle. As soon as the Romans
were landed on the western bank, they were delivered from the hostile pursuit of the Barbarians;
but, in a laborious march of two hundred miles over the plains of Mesopotamia, they endured the
last extremities of thirst and hunger. They were obliged to traverse the sandy desert, which, in
the extent of seventy miles, did not afford a single blade of sweet grass, nor a single spring of
fresh water; and the rest of the inhospitable waste was untrod by the footsteps either of friends or
enemies. Whenever a small measure of flour could be discovered in the camp, twenty pounds
weight were greedily purchased with ten pieces of gold: the beasts of burden were slaughtered
and devoured; and the desert was strewed with the arms and baggage of the Roman soldiers,
whose tattered garments and meagre countenances displayed their past sufferings and actual
misery. A small convoy of provisions advanced to meet the army as far as the castle of Ur; and
the supply was the more grateful, since it declared the fidelity of Sebastian and Procopius. At
Thilsaphata, the emperor most graciously received the generals of Mesopotamia; and the
remains of a once flourishing army at length reposed themselves under the walls of Nisibis. The
messengers of Jovian had already proclaimed, in the language of flattery, his election, his treaty,
and his return; and the new prince had taken the most effectual measures to secure the allegiance
of the armies and provinces of Europe, by placing the military command in the hands of those
officers, who, from motives of interest, or inclination, would firmly support the cause of their
benefactor.
The friends of Julian had confidently announced the success of his expedition. They entertained
a fond persuasion that the temples of the gods would be enriched with the spoils of the East; that
Persia would be reduced to the humble state of a tributary province, governed by the laws and
magistrates of Rome; that the Barbarians would adopt the dress, and manners, and language of
their conquerors; and that the youth of Ecbatana and Susa would study the art of rhetoric under
Grecian masters. The progress of the arms of Julian interrupted his communication with the
empire; and, from the moment that he passed the Tigris, his affectionate subjects were ignorant
of the fate and fortunes of their prince. Their contemplation of fancied triumphs was disturbed
by the melancholy rumor of his death; and they persisted to doubt, after they could no longer
deny, the truth of that fatal event. The messengers of Jovian promulgated the specious tale of a
prudent and necessary peace; the voice of fame, louder and more sincere, revealed the disgrace
of the emperor, and the conditions of the ignominious treaty. The minds of the people were
filled with astonishment and grief, with indignation and terror, when they were informed, that
the unworthy successor of Julian relinquished the five provinces which had been acquired by the
victory of Galerius; and that he shamefully surrendered to the Barbarians the important city of
Nisibis, the firmest bulwark of the provinces of the East. The deep and dangerous question, how
far the public faith should be observed, when it becomes incompatible with the public safety,
was freely agitated in popular conversation; and some hopes were entertained that the emperor
would redeem his pusillanimous behavior by a splendid act of patriotic perfidy. The inflexible
spirit of the Roman senate had always disclaimed the unequal conditions which were extorted
from the distress of their captive armies; and, if it were necessary to satisfy the national honor,
by delivering the guilty general into the hands of the Barbarians, the greatest part of the subjects
of Jovian would have cheerfully acquiesced in the precedent of ancient times.
But the emperor, whatever might be the limits of his constitutional authority, was the absolute
master of the laws and arms of the state; and the same motives which had forced him to
subscribe, now pressed him to execute, the treaty of peace. He was impatient to secure an empire
at the expense of a few provinces; and the respectable names of religion and honor concealed the
personal fears and ambition of Jovian. Notwithstanding the dutiful solicitations of the
inhabitants, decency, as well as prudence, forbade the emperor to lodge in the palace of Nisibis;
but the next morning after his arrival. Bineses, the ambassador of Persia, entered the place,
displayed from the citadel the standard of the Great King, and proclaimed, in his name, the cruel
alternative of exile or servitude. The principal citizens of Nisibis, who, till that fatal moment,
had confided in the protection of their sovereign, threw themselves at his feet. They conjured
him not to abandon, or, at least, not to deliver, a faithful colony to the rage of a Barbarian tyrant,
exasperated by the three successive defeats which he had experienced under the walls of Nisibis.
They still possessed arms and courage to repel the invaders of their country: they requested only
the permission of using them in their own defence; and, as soon as they had asserted their
independence, they should implore the favor of being again admitted into the ranks of his
subjects. Their arguments, their eloquence, their tears, were ineffectual. Jovian alleged, with
some confusion, the sanctity of oaths; and, as the reluctance with which he accepted the present
of a crown of gold, convinced the citizens of their hopeless condition, the advocate Sylvanus was
provoked to exclaim, "O emperor! may you thus be crowned by all the cities of your dominions!"
Jovian, who in a few weeks had assumed the habits of a prince, was displeased with freedom,
and offended with truth: and as he reasonably supposed, that the discontent of the people might
incline them to submit to the Persian government, he published an edict, under pain of death,
that they should leave the city within the term of three days. Ammianus has delineated in lively
colors the scene of universal despair, which he seems to have viewed with an eye of compassion.
The martial youth deserted, with indignant grief, the walls which they had so gloriously
defended: the disconsolate mourner dropped a last tear over the tomb of a son or husband, which
must soon be profaned by the rude hand of a Barbarian master; and the aged citizen kissed the
threshold, and clung to the doors, of the house where he had passed the cheerful and careless
hours of infancy. The highways were crowded with a trembling multitude: the distinctions of
rank, and sex, and age, were lost in the general calamity. Every one strove to bear away some
fragment from the wreck of his fortunes; and as they could not command the immediate service
of an adequate number of horses or wagons, they were obliged to leave behind them the greatest
part of their valuable effects. The savage insensibility of Jovian appears to have aggravated the
hardships of these unhappy fugitives. They were seated, however, in a new-built quarter of
Amida; and that rising city, with the reenforcement of a very considerable colony, soon
recovered its former splendor, and became the capital of Mesopotamia. Similar orders were
despatched by the emperor for the evacuation of Singara and the castle of the Moors; and for the
restitution of the five provinces beyond the Tigris. Sapor enjoyed the glory and the fruits of his
victory; and this ignominious peace has justly been considered as a memorable æra in the
decline and fall of the Roman empire. The predecessors of Jovian had sometimes relinquished
the dominion of distant and unprofitable provinces; but, since the foundation of the city, the
genius of Rome, the god Terminus, who guarded the boundaries of the republic, had never
retired before the sword of a victorious enemy.
After Jovian had performed those engagements which the voice of his people might have
tempted him to violate, he hastened away from the scene of his disgrace, and proceeded with his
whole court to enjoy the luxury of Antioch. Without consulting the dictates of religious zeal, he
was prompted, by humanity and gratitude, to bestow the last honors on the remains of his
deceased sovereign: and Procopius, who sincerely bewailed the loss of his kinsman, was
removed from the command of the army, under the decent pretence of conducting the funeral.
The corpse of Julian was transported from Nisibis to Tarsus, in a slow march of fifteen days;
and, as it passed through the cities of the East, was saluted by the hostile factions, with mournful
lamentations and clamorous insults. The Pagans already placed their beloved hero in the rank of
those gods whose worship he had restored; while the invectives of the Christians pursued the
soul of the Apostate to hell, and his body to the grave. One party lamented the approaching ruin
of their altars; the other celebrated the marvellous deliverance of their church. The Christians
applauded, in lofty and ambiguous strains, the stroke of divine vengeance, which had been so
long suspended over the guilty head of Julian. They acknowledge, that the death of the tyrant, at
the instant he expired beyond the Tigris, was revealed to the saints of Egypt, Syria, and
Cappadocia; and instead of suffering him to fall by the Persian darts, their indiscretion ascribed
the heroic deed to the obscure hand of some mortal or immortal champion of the faith. Such
imprudent declarations were eagerly adopted by the malice, or credulity, of their adversaries;
who darkly insinuated, or confidently asserted, that the governors of the church had instigated
and directed the fanaticism of a domestic assassin. Above sixteen years after the death of Julian,
the charge was solemnly and vehemently urged, in a public oration, addressed by Libanius to the
emperor Theodosius. His suspicions are unsupported by fact or argument; and we can only
esteem the generous zeal of the sophist of Antioch for the cold and neglected ashes of his friend.
It was an ancient custom in the funerals, as well as in the triumphs, of the Romans, that the voice
of praise should be corrected by that of satire and ridicule; and that, in the midst of the splendid
pageants, which displayed the glory of the living or of the dead, their imperfections should not
be concealed from the eyes of the world. This custom was practised in the funeral of Julian. The
comedians, who resented his contempt and aversion for the theatre, exhibited, with the applause
of a Christian audience, the lively and exaggerated representation of the faults and follies of the
deceased emperor. His various character and singular manners afforded an ample scope for
pleasantry and ridicule. In the exercise of his uncommon talents, he often descended below the
majesty of his rank. Alexander was transformed into Diogenes; the philosopher was degraded
into a priest. The purity of his virtue was sullied by excessive vanity; his superstition disturbed
the peace, and endangered the safety, of a mighty empire; and his irregular sallies were the less
entitled to indulgence, as they appeared to be the laborious efforts of art, or even of affectation.
The remains of Julian were interred at Tarsus in Cilicia; but his stately tomb, which arose in that
city, on the banks of the cold and limpid Cydnus, was displeasing to the faithful friends, who
loved and revered the memory of that extraordinary man. The philosopher expressed a very
reasonable wish, that the disciple of Plato might have reposed amidst the groves of the academy;
while the soldier exclaimed, in bolder accents, that the ashes of Julian should have been mingled
with those of Cæsar, in the field of Mars, and among the ancient monuments of Roman virtue.
The history of princes does not very frequently renew the examples of a similar competition.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire.
Part I.
The Government And Death Of Jovian. -- Election Of Valentinian, Who Associates His Brother
Valens, And Makes The Final Division Of The Eastern And Western Empires. -- Revolt Of
Procopius. -- Civil And Ecclesiastical Administration. -- Germany. -- Britain. -- Africa. -- The
East. -- The Danube. -- Death Of Valentinian. -- His Two Sons, Gratian And Valentinian II.,
Succeed To The Western Empire.
The death of Julian had left the public affairs of the empire in a very doubtful and dangerous
situation. The Roman army was saved by an inglorious, perhaps a necessary treaty; and the first
moments of peace were consecrated by the pious Jovian to restore the domestic tranquility of the
church and state. The indiscretion of his predecessor, instead of reconciling, had artfully
fomented the religious war: and the balance which he affected to preserve between the hostile
factions, served only to perpetuate the contest, by the vicissitudes of hope and fear, by the rival
claims of ancient possession and actual favor. The Christians had forgotten the spirit of the
gospel; and the Pagans had imbibed the spirit of the church. In private families, the sentiments
of nature were extinguished by the blind fury of zeal and revenge: the majesty of the laws was
violated or abused; the cities of the East were stained with blood; and the most implacable
enemies of the Romans were in the bosom of their country. Jovian was educated in the
profession of Christianity; and as he marched from Nisibis to Antioch, the banner of the Cross,
the Labarum of Constantine, which was again displayed at the head of the legions, announced to
the people the faith of their new emperor. As soon as he ascended the throne, he transmitted a
circular epistle to all the governors of provinces; in which he confessed the divine truth, and
secured the legal establishment, of the Christian religion. The insidious edicts of Julian were
abolished; the ecclesiastical immunities were restored and enlarged; and Jovian condescended to
lament, that the distress of the times obliged him to diminish the measure of charitable
distributions. The Christians were unanimous in the loud and sincere applause which they
bestowed on the pious successor of Julian. But they were still ignorant what creed, or what
synod, he would choose for the standard of orthodoxy; and the peace of the church immediately
revived those eager disputes which had been suspended during the season of persecution. The
episcopal leaders of the contending sects, convinced, from experience, how much their fate
would depend on the earliest impressions that were made on the mind of an untutored soldier,
hastened to the court of Edessa, or Antioch. The highways of the East were crowded with
Homoousian, and Arian, and Semi-Arian, and Eunomian bishops, who struggled to outstrip each
other in the holy race: the apartments of the palace resounded with their clamors; and the ears of
the prince were assaulted, and perhaps astonished, by the singular mixture of metaphysical
argument and passionate invective. The moderation of Jovian, who recommended concord and
charity, and referred the disputants to the sentence of a future council, was interpreted as a
symptom of indifference: but his attachment to the Nicene creed was at length discovered and
declared, by the reverence which he expressed for the celestial virtues of the great Athanasius.
The intrepid veteran of the faith, at the age of seventy, had issued from his retreat on the first
intelligence of the tyrant's death. The acclamations of the people seated him once more on the
archiepiscopal throne; and he wisely accepted, or anticipated, the invitation of Jovian. The
venerable figure of Athanasius, his calm courage, and insinuating eloquence, sustained the
reputation which he had already acquired in the courts of four successive princes. As soon as he
had gained the confidence, and secured the faith, of the Christian emperor, he returned in
triumph to his diocese, and continued, with mature counsels and undiminished vigor, to direct,
ten years longer, the ecclesiastical government of Alexandria, Egypt, and the Catholic church.
Before his departure from Antioch, he assured Jovian that his orthodox devotion would be
rewarded with a long and peaceful reign. Athanasius, had reason to hope, that he should be
allowed either the merit of a successful prediction, or the excuse of a grateful though ineffectual
prayer.
The slightest force, when it is applied to assist and guide the natural descent of its object,
operates with irresistible weight; and Jovian had the good fortune to embrace the religious
opinions which were supported by the spirit of the times, and the zeal and numbers of the most
powerful sect. Under his reign, Christianity obtained an easy and lasting victory; and as soon as
the smile of royal patronage was withdrawn, the genius of Paganism, which had been fondly
raised and cherished by the arts of Julian, sunk irrecoverably in the. In many cities, the temples
were shut or deserted: the philosophers who had abused their transient favor, thought it prudent
to shave their beards, and disguise their profession; and the Christians rejoiced, that they were
now in a condition to forgive, or to revenge, the injuries which they had suffered under the
preceding reign. The consternation of the Pagan world was dispelled by a wise and gracious
edict of toleration; in which Jovian explicitly declared, that although he should severely punish
the sacrilegious rites of magic, his subjects might exercise, with freedom and safety, the
ceremonies of the ancient worship. The memory of this law has been preserved by the orator
Themistius, who was deputed by the senate of Constantinople to express their royal devotion for
the new emperor. Themistius expatiates on the clemency of the Divine Nature, the facility of
human error, the rights of conscience, and the independence of the mind; and, with some
eloquence, inculcates the principles of philosophical toleration; whose aid Superstition herself,
in the hour of her distress, is not ashamed to implore. He justly observes, that in the recent
changes, both religions had been alternately disgraced by the seeming acquisition of worthless
proselytes, of those votaries of the reigning purple, who could pass, without a reason, and
without a blush, from the church to the temple, and from the altars of Jupiter to the sacred table
of the Christians.
In the space of seven months, the Roman troops, who were now returned to Antioch, had
performed a march of fifteen hundred miles; in which they had endured all the hardships of war,
of famine, and of climate. Notwithstanding their services, their fatigues, and the approach of
winter, the timid and impatient Jovian allowed only, to the men and horses, a respite of six
weeks. The emperor could not sustain the indiscreet and malicious raillery of the people of
Antioch. He was impatient to possess the palace of Constantinople; and to prevent the ambition
of some competitor, who might occupy the vacant allegiance of Europe. But he soon received
the grateful intelligence, that his authority was acknowledged from the Thracian Bosphorus to
the Atlantic Ocean. By the first letters which he despatched from the camp of Mesopotamia, he
had delegated the military command of Gaul and Illyricum to Malarich, a brave and faithful
officer of the nation of the Franks; and to his father-in-law, Count Lucillian, who had formerly
distinguished his courage and conduct in the defence of Nisibis. Malarich had declined an office
to which he thought himself unequal; and Lucillian was massacred at Rheims, in an accidental
mutiny of the Batavian cohorts. But the moderation of Jovinus, master-general of the cavalry,
who forgave the intention of his disgrace, soon appeased the tumult, and confirmed the uncertain
minds of the soldiers. The oath of fidelity was administered and taken, with loyal acclamations;
and the deputies of the Western armies saluted their new sovereign as he descended from Mount
Taurus to the city of Tyana in Cappadocia. From Tyana he continued his hasty march to Ancyra,
capital of the province of Galatia; where Jovian assumed, with his infant son, the name and
ensigns of the consulship. Dadastana, an obscure town, almost at an equal distance between
Ancyra and Nice, was marked for the fatal term of his journey and life. After indulging himself
with a plentiful, perhaps an intemperate, supper, he retired to rest; and the next morning the
emperor Jovian was found dead in his bed. The cause of this sudden death was variously
understood. By some it was ascribed to the consequences of an indigestion, occasioned either by
the quantity of the wine, or the quality of the mushrooms, which he had swallowed in the
evening. According to others, he was suffocated in his sleep by the vapor of charcoal, which
extracted from the walls of the apartment the unwholesome moisture of the fresh plaster. But
the want of a regular inquiry into the death of a prince, whose reign and person were soon
forgotten, appears to have been the only circumstance which countenanced the malicious
whispers of poison and domestic guilt. The body of Jovian was sent to Constantinople, to be
interred with his predecessors, and the sad procession was met on the road by his wife Charito,
the daughter of Count Lucillian; who still wept the recent death of her father, and was hastening
to dry her tears in the embraces of an Imperial husband. Her disappointment and grief were
imbittered by the anxiety of maternal tenderness. Six weeks before the death of Jovian, his infant
son had been placed in the curule chair, adorned with the title of Nobilissimus, and the vain
ensigns of the consulship. Unconscious of his fortune, the royal youth, who, from his
grandfather, assumed the name of Varronian, was reminded only by the jealousy of the
government, that he was the son of an emperor. Sixteen years afterwards he was still alive, but
he had already been deprived of an eye; and his afflicted mother expected every hour, that the
innocent victim would be torn from her arms, to appease, with his blood, the suspicions of the
reigning prince.
After the death of Jovian, the throne of the Roman world remained ten days, without a master.
The ministers and generals still continued to meet in council; to exercise their respective
functions; to maintain the public order; and peaceably to conduct the army to the city of Nice in
Bithynia, which was chosen for the place of the election. In a solemn assembly of the civil and
military powers of the empire, the diadem was again unanimously offered to the præfect Sallust.
He enjoyed the glory of a second refusal: and when the virtues of the father were alleged in favor
of his son, the præfect, with the firmness of a disinterested patriot, declared to the electors, that
the feeble age of the one, and the unexperienced youth of the other, were equally incapable of
the laborious duties of government. Several candidates were proposed; and, after weighing the
objections of character or situation, they were successively rejected; but, as soon as the name of
Valentinian was pronounced, the merit of that officer united the suffrages of the whole
assembly, and obtained the sincere approbation of Sallust himself. Valentinian was the son of
Count Gratian, a native of Cibalis, in Pannonia, who from an obscure condition had raised
himself, by matchless strength and dexterity, to the military commands of Africa and Britain;
from which he retired with an ample fortune and suspicious integrity. The rank and services of
Gratian contributed, however, to smooth the first steps of the promotion of his son; and afforded
him an early opportunity of displaying those solid and useful qualifications, which raised his
character above the ordinary level of his fellow-soldiers. The person of Valentinian was tall,
graceful, and majestic. His manly countenance, deeply marked with the impression of sense and
spirit, inspired his friends with awe, and his enemies with fear; and to second the efforts of his
undaunted courage, the son of Gratian had inherited the advantages of a strong and healthy
constitution. By the habits of chastity and temperance, which restrain the appetites and
invigorate the faculties, Valentinian preserved his own and the public esteem. The avocations of
a military life had diverted his youth from the elegant pursuits of literature; * he was ignorant of
the Greek language, and the arts of rhetoric; but as the mind of the orator was never disconcerted
by timid perplexity, he was able, as often as the occasion prompted him, to deliver his decided
sentiments with bold and ready elocution. The laws of martial discipline were the only laws that
he had studied; and he was soon distinguished by the laborious diligence, and inflexible severity,
with which he discharged and enforced the duties of the camp. In the time of Julian he provoked
the danger of disgrace, by the contempt which he publicly expressed for the reigning religion;
and it should seem, from his subsequent conduct, that the indiscreet and unseasonable freedom
of Valentinian was the effect of military spirit, rather than of Christian zeal. He was pardoned,
however, and still employed by a prince who esteemed his merit; and in the various events of
the Persian war, he improved the reputation which he had already acquired on the banks of the
Rhine. The celerity and success with which he executed an important commission,
recommended him to the favor of Jovian; and to the honorable command of the second school,
or company, of Targetiers, of the domestic guards. In the march from Antioch, he had reached
his quarters at Ancyra, when he was unexpectedly summoned, without guilt and without
intrigue, to assume, in the forty-third year of his age, the absolute government of the Roman
empire.
The invitation of the ministers and generals at Nice was of little moment, unless it were
confirmed by the voice of the army. The aged Sallust, who had long observed the irregular
fluctuations of popular assemblies, proposed, under pain of death, that none of those persons,
whose rank in the service might excite a party in their favor, should appear in public on the day
of the inauguration. Yet such was the prevalence of ancient superstition, that a whole day was
voluntarily added to this dangerous interval, because it happened to be the intercalation of the
Bissextile. At length, when the hour was supposed to be propitious, Valentinian showed himself
from a lofty tribunal; the judicious choice was applauded; and the new prince was solemnly
invested with the diadem and the purple, amidst the acclamation of the troops, who were
disposed in martial order round the tribunal. But when he stretched forth his hand to address the
armed multitude, a busy whisper was accidentally started in the ranks, and insensibly swelled
into a loud and imperious clamor, that he should name, without delay, a colleague in the empire.
The intrepid calmness of Valentinian obtained silence, and commanded respect; and he thus
addressed the assembly: "A few minutes since it was in your power, fellow-soldiers, to have left
me in the obscurity of a private station. Judging, from the testimony of my past life, that I
deserved to reign, you have placed me on the throne. It is now my duty to consult the safety and
interest of the republic. The weight of the universe is undoubtedly too great for the hands of a
feeble mortal. I am conscious of the limits of my abilities, and the uncertainty of my life; and far
from declining, I am anxious to solicit, the assistance of a worthy colleague. But, where discord
may be fatal, the choice of a faithful friend requires mature and serious deliberation. That
deliberation shall be my care. Let your conduct be dutiful and consistent. Retire to your quarters;
refresh your minds and bodies; and expect the accustomed donative on the accession of a new
emperor." The astonished troops, with a mixture of pride, of satisfaction, and of terror,
confessed the voice of their master. Their angry clamors subsided into silent reverence; and
Valentinian, encompassed with the eagles of the legions, and the various banners of the cavalry
and infantry, was conducted, in warlike pomp, to the palace of Nice. As he was sensible,
however, of the importance of preventing some rash declaration of the soldiers, he consulted the
assembly of the chiefs; and their real sentiments were concisely expressed by the generous
freedom of Dagalaiphus. "Most excellent prince," said that officer, "if you consider only your
family, you have a brother; if you love the republic, look round for the most deserving of the
Romans." The emperor, who suppressed his displeasure, without altering his intention, slowly
proceeded from Nice to Nicomedia and Constantinople. In one of the suburbs of that capital,
thirty days after his own elevation, he bestowed the title of Augustus on his brother Valens; *
and as the boldest patriots were convinced, that their opposition, without being serviceable to
their country, would be fatal to themselves, the declaration of his absolute will was received
with silent submission. Valens was now in the thirty-sixth year of his age; but his abilities had
never been exercised in any employment, military or civil; and his character had not inspired the
world with any sanguine expectations. He possessed, however, one quality, which recommended
him to Valentinian, and preserved the domestic peace of the empire; devout and grateful
attachment to his benefactor, whose superiority of genius, as well as of authority, Valens humbly
and cheerfully acknowledged in every action of his life.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire. -- Part II.
Before Valentinian divided the provinces, he reformed the administration of the empire. All
ranks of subjects, who had been injured or oppressed under the reign of Julian, were invited to
support their public accusations. The silence of mankind attested the spotless integrity of the
præfect Sallust; and his own pressing solicitations, that he might be permitted to retire from the
business of the state, were rejected by Valentinian with the most honorable expressions of
friendship and esteem. But among the favorites of the late emperor, there were many who had
abused his credulity or superstition; and who could no longer hope to be protected either by
favor or justice. The greater part of the ministers of the palace, and the governors of the
provinces, were removed from their respective stations; yet the eminent merit of some officers
was distinguished from the obnoxious crowd; and, notwithstanding the opposite clamors of zeal
and resentment, the whole proceedings of this delicate inquiry appear to have been conducted
with a reasonable share of wisdom and moderation. The festivity of a new reign received a short
and suspicious interruption from the sudden illness of the two princes; but as soon as their health
was restored, they left Constantinople in the beginning of the spring. In the castle, or palace, of
Mediana, only three miles from Naissus, they executed the solemn and final division of the
Roman empire. Valentinian bestowed on his brother the rich præfecture of the East, from the
Lower Danube to the confines of Persia; whilst he reserved for his immediate government the
warlike * præfectures of Illyricum, Italy, and Gaul, from the extremity of Greece to the
Caledonian rampart, and from the rampart of Caledonia to the foot of Mount Atlas. The
provincial administration remained on its former basis; but a double supply of generals and
magistrates was required for two councils, and two courts: the division was made with a just
regard to their peculiar merit and situation, and seven master-generals were soon created, either
of the cavalry or infantry. When this important business had been amicably transacted,
Valentinian and Valens embraced for the last time. The emperor of the West established his
temporary residence at Milan; and the emperor of the East returned to Constantinople, to assume
the dominion of fifty provinces, of whose language he was totally ignorant.
The tranquility of the East was soon disturbed by rebellion; and the throne of Valens was
threatened by the daring attempts of a rival whose affinity to the emperor Julian was his sole
merit, and had been his only crime. Procopius had been hastily promoted from the obscure
station of a tribune, and a notary, to the joint command of the army of Mesopotamia; the public
opinion already named him as the successor of a prince who was destitute of natural heirs; and a
vain rumor was propagated by his friends, or his enemies, that Julian, before the altar of the
Moon at Carrhæ, had privately invested Procopius with the Imperial purple. He endeavored, by
his dutiful and submissive behavior, to disarm the jealousy of Jovian; resigned, without a
contest, his military command; and retired, with his wife and family, to cultivate the ample
patrimony which he possessed in the province of Cappadocia. These useful and innocent
occupations were interrupted by the appearance of an officer with a band of soldiers, who, in the
name of his new sovereigns, Valentinian and Valens, was despatched to conduct the unfortunate
Procopius either to a perpetual prison or an ignominious death. His presence of mind procured
him a longer respite, and a more splendid fate. Without presuming to dispute the royal mandate,
he requested the indulgence of a few moments to embrace his weeping family; and while the
vigilance of his guards was relaxed by a plentiful entertainment, he dexterously escaped to the
sea-coast of the Euxine, from whence he passed over to the country of Bosphorus. In that
sequestered region he remained many months, exposed to the hardships of exile, of solitude, and
of want; his melancholy temper brooding over his misfortunes, and his mind agitated by the just
apprehension, that, if any accident should discover his name, the faithless Barbarians would
violate, without much scruple, the laws of hospitality. In a moment of impatience and despair,
Procopius embarked in a merchant vessel, which made sail for Constantinople; and boldly
aspired to the rank of a sovereign, because he was not allowed to enjoy the security of a subject.
At first he lurked in the villages of Bithynia, continually changing his habitation and his
disguise. By degrees he ventured into the capital, trusted his life and fortune to the fidelity of
two friends, a senator and a eunuch, and conceived some hopes of success, from the intelligence
which he obtained of the actual state of public affairs. The body of the people was infected with
a spirit of discontent: they regretted the justice and the abilities of Sallust, who had been
imprudently dismissed from the præfecture of the East. They despised the character of Valens,
which was rude without vigor, and feeble without mildness. They dreaded the influence of his
father-in-law, the patrician Petronius, a cruel and rapacious minister, who rigorously exacted all
the arrears of tribute that might remain unpaid since the reign of the emperor Aurelian. The
circumstances were propitious to the designs of a usurper. The hostile measures of the Persians
required the presence of Valens in Syria: from the Danube to the Euphrates the troops were in
motion; and the capital was occasionally filled with the soldiers who passed or repassed the
Thracian Bosphorus. Two cohorts of Gaul were persuaded to listen to the secret proposals of the
conspirators; which were recommended by the promise of a liberal donative; and, as they still
revered the memory of Julian, they easily consented to support the hereditary claim of his
proscribed kinsman. At the dawn of day they were drawn up near the baths of Anastasia; and
Procopius, clothed in a purple garment, more suitable to a player than to a monarch, appeared, as
if he rose from the dead, in the midst of Constantinople. The soldiers, who were prepared for his
reception, saluted their trembling prince with shouts of joy and vows of fidelity. Their numbers
were soon increased by a band of sturdy peasants, collected from the adjacent country; and
Procopius, shielded by the arms of his adherents, was successively conducted to the tribunal, the
senate, and the palace. During the first moments of his tumultuous reign, he was astonished and
terrified by the gloomy silence of the people; who were either ignorant of the cause, or
apprehensive of the event. But his military strength was superior to any actual resistance: the
malecontents flocked to the standard of rebellion; the poor were excited by the hopes, and the
rich were intimidated by the fear, of a general pillage; and the obstinate credulity of the
multitude was once more deceived by the promised advantages of a revolution. The magistrates
were seized; the prisons and arsenals broke open; the gates, and the entrance of the harbor, were
diligently occupied; and, in a few hours, Procopius became the absolute, though precarious,
master of the Imperial city. * The usurper improved this unexpected success with some degree of
courage and dexterity. He artfully propagated the rumors and opinions the most favorable to his
interest; while he deluded the populace by giving audience to the frequent, but imaginary,
ambassadors of distant nations. The large bodies of troops stationed in the cities of Thrace and
the fortresses of the Lower Danube, were gradually involved in the guilt of rebellion: and the
Gothic princes consented to supply the sovereign of Constantinople with the formidable strength
of several thousand auxiliaries. His generals passed the Bosphorus, and subdued, without an
effort, the unarmed, but wealthy provinces of Bithynia and Asia. After an honorable defence, the
city and island of Cyzicus yielded to his power; the renowned legions of the Jovians and
Herculians embraced the cause of the usurper, whom they were ordered to crush; and, as the
veterans were continually augmented with new levies, he soon appeared at the head of an army,
whose valor, as well as numbers, were not unequal to the greatness of the contest. The son of
Hormisdas, a youth of spirit and ability, condescended to draw his sword against the lawful
emperor of the East; and the Persian prince was immediately invested with the ancient and
extraordinary powers of a Roman Proconsul. The alliance of Faustina, the widow of the emperor
Constantius, who intrusted herself and her daughter to the hands of the usurper, added dignity
and reputation to his cause. The princess Constantia, who was then about five years of age,
accompanied, in a litter, the march of the army. She was shown to the multitude in the arms of
her adopted father; and, as often as she passed through the ranks, the tenderness of the soldiers
was inflamed into martial fury: they recollected the glories of the house of Constantine, and
they declared, with loyal acclamation, that they would shed the last drop of their blood in the
defence of the royal infant.
In the mean while Valentinian was alarmed and perplexed by the doubtful intelligence of the
revolt of the East. * The difficulties of a German was forced him to confine his immediate care
to the safety of his own dominions; and, as every channel of communication was stopped or
corrupted, he listened, with doubtful anxiety, to the rumors which were industriously spread, that
the defeat and death of Valens had left Procopius sole master of the Eastern provinces. Valens
was not dead: but on the news of the rebellion, which he received at Cæsarea, he basely
despaired of his life and fortune; proposed to negotiate with the usurper, and discovered his
secret inclination to abdicate the Imperial purple. The timid monarch was saved from disgrace
and ruin by the firmness of his ministers, and their abilities soon decided in his favor the event
of the civil war. In a season of tranquillity, Sallust had resigned without a murmur; but as soon
as the public safety was attacked, he ambitiously solicited the preeminence of toil and danger;
and the restoration of that virtuous minister to the præfecture of the East, was the first step
which indicated the repentance of Valens, and satisfied the minds of the people. The reign of
Procopius was apparently supported by powerful armies and obedient provinces. But many of
the principal officers, military as well as civil, had been urged, either by motives of duty or
interest, to withdraw themselves from the guilty scene; or to watch the moment of betraying, and
deserting, the cause of the usurper. Lupicinus advanced by hasty marches, to bring the legions of
Syria to the aid of Valens. Arintheus, who, in strength, beauty, and valor, excelled all the heroes
of the age, attacked with a small troop a superior body of the rebels. When he beheld the faces of
the soldiers who had served under his banner, he commanded them, with a loud voice, to seize
and deliver up their pretended leader; and such was the ascendant of his genius, that this
extraordinary order was instantly obeyed. Arbetio, a respectable veteran of the great
Constantine, who had been distinguished by the honors of the consulship, was persuaded to
leave his retirement, and once more to conduct an army into the field. In the heat of action,
calmly taking off his helmet, he showed his gray hairs and venerable countenance: saluted the
soldiers of Procopius by the endearing names of children and companions, and exhorted them no
longer to support the desperate cause of a contemptible tyrant; but to follow their old
commander, who had so often led them to honor and victory. In the two engagements of Thyatira
and Nacolia, the unfortunate Procopius was deserted by his troops, who were seduced by the
instructions and example of their perfidious officers. After wandering some time among the
woods and mountains of Phrygia, he was betrayed by his desponding followers, conducted to the
Imperial camp, and immediately beheaded. He suffered the ordinary fate of an unsuccessful
usurper; but the acts of cruelty which were exercised by the conqueror, under the forms of legal
justice, excited the pity and indignation of mankind.
Such indeed are the common and natural fruits of despotism and rebellion. But the inquisition
into the crime of magic, which, under the reign of the two brothers, was so rigorously
prosecuted both at Rome and Antioch, was interpreted as the fatal symptom, either of the
displeasure of Heaven, or of the depravity of mankind. Let us not hesitate to indulge a liberal
pride, that, in the present age, the enlightened part of Europe has abolished a cruel and odious
prejudice, which reigned in every climate of the globe, and adhered to every system of religious
opinions. The nations, and the sects, of the Roman world, admitted with equal credulity, and
similar abhorrence, the reality of that infernal art, which was able to control the eternal order of
the planets, and the voluntary operations of the human mind. They dreaded the mysterious power
of spells and incantations, of potent herbs, and execrable rites; which could extinguish or recall
life, inflame the passions of the soul, blast the works of creation, and extort from the reluctant
dæmons the secrets of futurity. They believed, with the wildest inconsistency, that this
preternatural dominion of the air, of earth, and of hell, was exercised, from the vilest motives of
malice or gain, by some wrinkled hags and itinerant sorcerers, who passed their obscure lives in
penury and contempt. The arts of magic were equally condemned by the public opinion, and by
the laws of Rome; but as they tended to gratify the most imperious passions of the heart of man,
they were continually proscribed, and continually practised. An imaginary cause as capable of
producing the most serious and mischievous effects. The dark predictions of the death of an
emperor, or the success of a conspiracy, were calculated only to stimulate the hopes of ambition,
and to dissolve the ties of fidelity; and the intentional guilt of magic was aggravated by the
actual crimes of treason and sacrilege. Such vain terrors disturbed the peace of society, and the
happiness of individuals; and the harmless flame which insensibly melted a waxen image, might
derive a powerful and pernicious energy from the affrighted fancy of the person whom it was
maliciously designed to represent. From the infusion of those herbs, which were supposed to
possess a supernatural influence, it was an easy step to the use of more substantial poison; and
the folly of mankind sometimes became the instrument, and the mask, of the most atrocious
crimes. As soon as the zeal of informers was encouraged by the ministers of Valens and
Valentinian, they could not refuse to listen to another charge, too frequently mingled in the
scenes of domestic guilt; a charge of a softer and less malignant nature, for which the pious,
though excessive, rigor of Constantine had recently decreed the punishment of death. This
deadly and incoherent mixture of treason and magic, of poison and adultery, afforded infinite
gradations of guilt and innocence, of excuse and aggravation, which in these proceedings appear
to have been confounded by the angry or corrupt passions of the judges. They easily discovered
that the degree of their industry and discernment was estimated, by the Imperial court, according
to the number of executions that were furnished from the respective tribunals. It was not without
extreme reluctance that they pronounced a sentence of acquittal; but they eagerly admitted such
evidence as was stained with perjury, or procured by torture, to prove the most improbable
charges against the most respectable characters. The progress of the inquiry continually opened
new subjects of criminal prosecution; the audacious informer, whose falsehood was detected,
retired with impunity; but the wretched victim, who discovered his real or pretended
accomplices, were seldom permitted to receive the price of his infamy. From the extremity of
Italy and Asia, the young, and the aged, were dragged in chains to the tribunals of Rome and
Antioch. Senators, matrons, and philosophers, expired in ignominious and cruel tortures. The
soldiers, who were appointed to guard the prisons, declared, with a murmur of pity and
indignation, that their numbers were insufficient to oppose the flight, or resistance, of the
multitude of captives. The wealthiest families were ruined by fines and confiscations; the most
innocent citizens trembled for their safety; and we may form some notion of the magnitude of
the evil, from the extravagant assertion of an ancient writer, that, in the obnoxious provinces, the
prisoners, the exiles, and the fugitives, formed the greatest part of the inhabitants.
When Tacitus describes the deaths of the innocent and illustrious Romans, who were sacrificed
to the cruelty of the first Cæsars, the art of the historian, or the merit of the sufferers, excites in
our breast the most lively sensations of terror, of admiration, and of pity. The coarse and
undistinguishing pencil of Ammianus has delineated his bloody figures with tedious and
disgusting accuracy. But as our attention is no longer engaged by the contrast of freedom and
servitude, of recent greatness and of actual misery, we should turn with horror from the frequent
executions, which disgraced, both at Rome and Antioch, the reign of the two brothers. Valens
was of a timid, and Valentinian of a choleric, disposition. An anxious regard to his personal
safety was the ruling principle of the administration of Valens. In the condition of a subject, he
had kissed, with trembling awe, the hand of the oppressor; and when he ascended the throne, he
reasonably expected, that the same fears, which had subdued his own mind, would secure the
patient submission of his people. The favorites of Valens obtained, by the privilege of rapine and
confiscation, the wealth which his economy would have refused. They urged, with persuasive
eloquence, that, in all cases of treason, suspicion is equivalent to proof; that the power supposes
the intention, of mischief; that the intention is not less criminal than the act; and that a subject
no longer deserves to live, if his life may threaten the safety, or disturb the repose, of his
sovereign. The judgment of Valentinian was sometimes deceived, and his confidence abused;
but he would have silenced the informers with a contemptuous smile, had they presumed to
alarm his fortitude by the sound of danger. They praised his inflexible love of justice; and, in the
pursuit of justice, the emperor was easily tempted to consider clemency as a weakness, and
passion as a virtue. As long as he wrestled with his equals, in the bold competition of an active
and ambitious life, Valentinian was seldom injured, and never insulted, with impunity: if his
prudence was arraigned, his spirit was applauded; and the proudest and most powerful generals
were apprehensive of provoking the resentment of a fearless soldier. After he became master of
the world, he unfortunately forgot, that where no resistance can be made, no courage can be
exerted; and instead of consulting the dictates of reason and magnanimity, he indulged the
furious emotions of his temper, at a time when they were disgraceful to himself, and fatal to the
defenceless objects of his displeasure. In the government of his household, or of his empire,
slight, or even imaginary, offences -- a hasty word, a casual omission, an involuntary delay --
were chastised by a sentence of immediate death. The expressions which issued the most readily
from the mouth of the emperor of the West were, "Strike off his head;" "Burn him alive;" "Let
him be beaten with clubs till he expires;" and his most favored ministers soon understood, that,
by a rash attempt to dispute, or suspend, the execution of his sanguinary commands, they might
involve themselves in the guilt and punishment of disobedience. The repeated gratification of
this savage justice hardened the mind of Valentinian against pity and remorse; and the sallies of
passion were confirmed by the habits of cruelty. He could behold with calm satisfaction the
convulsive agonies of torture and death; he reserved his friendship for those faithful servants
whose temper was the most congenial to his own. The merit of Maximin, who had slaughtered
the noblest families of Rome, was rewarded with the royal approbation, and the præfecture of
Gaul. Two fierce and enormous bears, distinguished by the appellations of Innocence, and Mica
Aurea, could alone deserve to share the favor of Maximin. The cages of those trusty guards were
always placed near the bed-chamber of Valentinian, who frequently amused his eyes with the
grateful spectacle of seeing them tear and devour the bleeding limbs of the malefactors who
were abandoned to their rage. Their diet and exercises were carefully inspected by the Roman
emperor; and when Innocence had earned her discharge, by a long course of meritorious service,
the faithful animal was again restored to the freedom of her native woods.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire. -- Part III.
But in the calmer moments of reflection, when the mind of Valens was not agitated by fear, or
that of Valentinian by rage, the tyrant resumed the sentiments, or at least the conduct, of the
father of his country. The dispassionate judgment of the Western emperor could clearly perceive,
and accurately pursue, his own and the public interest; and the sovereign of the East, who
imitated with equal docility the various examples which he received from his elder brother, was
sometimes guided by the wisdom and virtue of the præfect Sallust. Both princes invariably
retained, in the purple, the chaste and temperate simplicity which had adorned their private life;
and, under their reign, the pleasures of the court never cost the people a blush or a sigh. They
gradually reformed many of the abuses of the times of Constantius; judiciously adopted and
improved the designs of Julian and his successor; and displayed a style and spirit of legislation
which might inspire posterity with the most favorable opinion of their character and government.
It is not from the master of Innocence, that we should expect the tender regard for the welfare of
his subjects, which prompted Valentinian to condemn the exposition of new-born infants; and to
establish fourteen skilful physicians, with stipends and privileges, in the fourteen quarters of
Rome. The good sense of an illiterate soldier founded a useful and liberal institution for the
education of youth, and the support of declining science. It was his intention, that the arts of
rhetoric and grammar should be taught in the Greek and Latin languages, in the metropolis of
every province; and as the size and dignity of the school was usually proportioned to the
importance of the city, the academies of Rome and Constantinople claimed a just and singular
preeminence. The fragments of the literary edicts of Valentinian imperfectly represent the
school of Constantinople, which was gradually improved by subsequent regulations. That school
consisted of thirty-one professors in different branches of learning. One philosopher, and two
lawyers; five sophists, and ten grammarians for the Greek, and three orators, and ten
grammarians for the Latin tongue; besides seven scribes, or, as they were then styled,
antiquarians, whose laborious pens supplied the public library with fair and correct copies of the
classic writers. The rule of conduct, which was prescribed to the students, is the more curious, as
it affords the first outlines of the form and discipline of a modern university. It was required, that
they should bring proper certificates from the magistrates of their native province. Their names,
professions, and places of abode, were regularly entered in a public register. The studious youth
were severely prohibited from wasting their time in feasts, or in the theatre; and the term of their
education was limited to the age of twenty. The præfect of the city was empowered to chastise
the idle and refractory by stripes or expulsion; and he was directed to make an annual report to
the master of the offices, that the knowledge and abilities of the scholars might be usefully
applied to the public service. The institutions of Valentinian contributed to secure the benefits of
peace and plenty; and the cities were guarded by the establishment of the Defensors; freely
elected as the tribunes and advocates of the people, to support their rights, and to expose their
grievances, before the tribunals of the civil magistrates, or even at the foot of the Imperial
throne. The finances were diligently administered by two princes, who had been so long
accustomed to the rigid economy of a private fortune; but in the receipt and application of the
revenue, a discerning eye might observe some difference between the government of the East
and of the West. Valens was persuaded, that royal liberality can be supplied only by public
oppression, and his ambition never aspired to secure, by their actual distress, the future strength
and prosperity of his people. Instead of increasing the weight of taxes, which, in the space of
forty years, had been gradually doubled, he reduced, in the first years of his reign, one fourth of
the tribute of the East. Valentinian appears to have been less attentive and less anxious to
relieve the burdens of his people. He might reform the abuses of the fiscal administration; but he
exacted, without scruple, a very large share of the private property; as he was convinced, that the
revenues, which supported the luxury of individuals, would be much more advantageously
employed for the defence and improvement of the state. The subjects of the East, who enjoyed
the present benefit, applauded the indulgence of their prince. The solid but less splendid, merit
of Valentinian was felt and acknowledged by the subsequent generation.
But the most honorable circumstance of the character of Valentinian, is the firm and temperate
impartiality which he uniformly preserved in an age of religious contention. His strong sense,
unenlightened, but uncorrupted, by study, declined, with respectful indifference, the subtle
questions of theological debate. The government of the Earth claimed his vigilance, and
satisfied his ambition; and while he remembered that he was the disciple of the church, he never
forgot that he was the sovereign of the clergy. Under the reign of an apostate, he had signalized
his zeal for the honor of Christianity: he allowed to his subjects the privilege which he had
assumed for himself; and they might accept, with gratitude and confidence, the general
toleration which was granted by a prince addicted to passion, but incapable of fear or of
disguise. The Pagans, the Jews, and all the various sects which acknowledged the divine
authority of Christ, were protected by the laws from arbitrary power or popular insult; nor was
any mode of worship prohibited by Valentinian, except those secret and criminal practices,
which abused the name of religion for the dark purposes of vice and disorder. The art of magic,
as it was more cruelly punished, was more strictly proscribed: but the emperor admitted a formal
distinction to protect the ancient methods of divination, which were approved by the senate, and
exercised by the Tuscan haruspices. He had condemned, with the consent of the most rational
Pagans, the license of nocturnal sacrifices; but he immediately admitted the petition of
Prætextatus, proconsul of Achaia, who represented, that the life of the Greeks would become
dreary and comfortless, if they were deprived of the invaluable blessing of the Eleusinian
mysteries. Philosophy alone can boast, (and perhaps it is no more than the boast of philosophy,)
that her gentle hand is able to eradicate from the human mind the latent and deadly principle of
fanaticism. But this truce of twelve years, which was enforced by the wise and vigorous
government of Valentinian, by suspending the repetition of mutual injuries, contributed to soften
the manners, and abate the prejudices, of the religious factions.
The friend of toleration was unfortunately placed at a distance from the scene of the fiercest
controversies. As soon as the Christians of the West had extricated themselves from the snares
of the creed of Rimini, they happily relapsed into the slumber of orthodoxy; and the small
remains of the Arian party, that still subsisted at Sirmium or Milan, might be considered rather
as objects of contempt than of resentment. But in the provinces of the East, from the Euxine to
the extremity of Thebais, the strength and numbers of the hostile factions were more equally
balanced; and this equality, instead of recommending the counsels of peace, served only to
perpetuate the horrors of religious war. The monks and bishops supported their arguments by
invectives; and their invectives were sometimes followed by blows. Athanasius still reigned at
Alexandria; the thrones of Constantinople and Antioch were occupied by Arian prelates, and
every episcopal vacancy was the occasion of a popular tumult. The Homoousians were fortified
by the reconciliation of fifty-nine Macedonian, or Semi-Arian, bishops; but their secret
reluctance to embrace the divinity of the Holy Ghost, clouded the splendor of the triumph; and
the declaration of Valens, who, in the first years of his reign, had imitated the impartial conduct
of his brother, was an important victory on the side of Arianism. The two brothers had passed
their private life in the condition of catechumens; but the piety of Valens prompted him to solicit
the sacrament of baptism, before he exposed his person to the dangers of a Gothic war. He
naturally addressed himself to Eudoxus, * bishop of the Imperial city; and if the ignorant
monarch was instructed by that Arian pastor in the principles of heterodox theology, his
misfortune, rather than his guilt, was the inevitable consequence of his erroneous choice.
Whatever had been the determination of the emperor, he must have offended a numerous party
of his Christian subjects; as the leaders both of the Homoousians and of the Arians believed,
that, if they were not suffered to reign, they were most cruelly injured and oppressed. After he
had taken this decisive step, it was extremely difficult for him to preserve either the virtue, or the
reputation of impartiality. He never aspired, like Constantius, to the fame of a profound
theologian; but as he had received with simplicity and respect the tenets of Eudoxus, Valens
resigned his conscience to the direction of his ecclesiastical guides, and promoted, by the
influence of his authority, the reunion of the Athanasian heretics to the body of the Catholic
church. At first, he pitied their blindness; by degrees he was provoked at their obstinacy; and he
insensibly hated those sectaries to whom he was an object of hatred. The feeble mind of Valens
was always swayed by the persons with whom he familiarly conversed; and the exile or
imprisonment of a private citizen are the favors the most readily granted in a despotic court.
Such punishments were frequently inflicted on the leaders of the Homoousian party; and the
misfortune of fourscore ecclesiastics of Constantinople, who, perhaps accidentally, were burned
on shipboard, was imputed to the cruel and premeditated malice of the emperor, and his Arian
ministers. In every contest, the Catholics (if we may anticipate that name) were obliged to pay
the penalty of their own faults, and of those of their adversaries. In every election, the claims of
the Arian candidate obtained the preference; and if they were opposed by the majority of the
people, he was usually supported by the authority of the civil magistrate, or even by the terrors of
a military force. The enemies of Athanasius attempted to disturb the last years of his venerable
age; and his temporary retreat to his father's sepulchre has been celebrated as a fifth exile. But
the zeal of a great people, who instantly flew to arms, intimidated the præfect: and the
archbishop was permitted to end his life in peace and in glory, after a reign of forty-seven years.
The death of Athanasius was the signal of the persecution of Egypt; and the Pagan minister of
Valens, who forcibly seated the worthless Lucius on the archiepiscopal throne, purchased the
favor of the reigning party, by the blood and sufferings of their Christian brethren. The free
toleration of the heathen and Jewish worship was bitterly lamented, as a circumstance which
aggravated the misery of the Catholics, and the guilt of the impious tyrant of the East.
The triumph of the orthodox party has left a deep stain of persecution on the memory of Valens;
and the character of a prince who derived his virtues, as well as his vices, from a feeble
understanding and a pusillanimous temper, scarcely deserves the labor of an apology. Yet candor
may discover some reasons to suspect that the ecclesiastical ministers of Valens often exceeded
the orders, or even the intentions, of their master; and that the real measure of facts has been
very liberally magnified by the vehement declamation and easy credulity of his antagonists. 1.
The silence of Valentinian may suggest a probable argument that the partial severities, which
were exercised in the name and provinces of his colleague, amounted only to some obscure and
inconsiderable deviations from the established system of religious toleration: and the judicious
historian, who has praised the equal temper of the elder brother, has not thought himself obliged
to contrast the tranquillity of the West with the cruel persecution of the East. 2. Whatever credit
may be allowed to vague and distant reports, the character, or at least the behavior, of Valens,
may be most distinctly seen in his personal transactions with the eloquent Basil, archbishop of
Cæsarea, who had succeeded Athanasius in the management of the Trinitarian cause. The
circumstantial narrative has been composed by the friends and admirers of Basil; and as soon as
we have stripped away a thick coat of rhetoric and miracle, we shall be astonished by the
unexpected mildness of the Arian tyrant, who admired the firmness of his character, or was
apprehensive, if he employed violence, of a general revolt in the province of Cappadocia. The
archbishop, who asserted, with inflexible pride, the truth of his opinions, and the dignity of his
rank, was left in the free possession of his conscience and his throne. The emperor devoutly
assisted at the solemn service of the cathedral; and, instead of a sentence of banishment,
subscribed the donation of a valuable estate for the use of a hospital, which Basil had lately
founded in the neighborhood of Cæsarea. 3. I am not able to discover, that any law (such as
Theodosius afterwards enacted against the Arians) was published by Valens against the
Athanasian sectaries; and the edict which excited the most violent clamors, may not appear so
extremely reprehensible. The emperor had observed, that several of his subjects, gratifying their
lazy disposition under the pretence of religion, had associated themselves with the monks of
Egypt; and he directed the count of the East to drag them from their solitude; and to compel
these deserters of society to accept the fair alternative of renouncing their temporal possessions,
or of discharging the public duties of men and citizens. The ministers of Valens seem to have
extended the sense of this penal statute, since they claimed a right of enlisting the young and
able-bodied monks in the Imperial armies. A detachment of cavalry and infantry, consisting of
three thousand men, marched from Alexandria into the adjacent desert of Nitria, which was
peopled by five thousand monks. The soldiers were conducted by Arian priests; and it is
reported, that a considerable slaughter was made in the monasteries which disobeyed the
commands of their sovereign.
The strict regulations which have been framed by the wisdom of modern legislators to restrain
the wealth and avarice of the clergy, may be originally deduced from the example of the emperor
Valentinian. His edict, addressed to Damasus, bishop of Rome, was publicly read in the
churches of the city. He admonished the ecclesiastics and monks not to frequent the houses of
widows and virgins; and menaced their disobedience with the animadversion of the civil judge.
The director was no longer permitted to receive any gift, or legacy, or inheritance, from the
liberality of his spiritual-daughter: every testament contrary to this edict was declared null and
void; and the illegal donation was confiscated for the use of the treasury. By a subsequent
regulation, it should seem, that the same provisions were extended to nuns and bishops; and that
all persons of the ecclesiastical order were rendered incapable of receiving any testamentary
gifts, and strictly confined to the natural and legal rights of inheritance. As the guardian of
domestic happiness and virtue, Valentinian applied this severe remedy to the growing evil. In the
capital of the empire, the females of noble and opulent houses possessed a very ample share of
independent property: and many of those devout females had embraced the doctrines of
Christianity, not only with the cold assent of the understanding, but with the warmth of
affection, and perhaps with the eagerness of fashion. They sacrificed the pleasures of dress and
luxury; and renounced, for the praise of chastity, the soft endearments of conjugal society. Some
ecclesiastic, of real or apparent sanctity, was chosen to direct their timorous conscience, and to
amuse the vacant tenderness of their heart: and the unbounded confidence, which they hastily
bestowed, was often abused by knaves and enthusiasts; who hastened from the extremities of the
East, to enjoy, on a splendid theatre, the privileges of the monastic profession. By their contempt
of the world, they insensibly acquired its most desirable advantages; the lively attachment,
perhaps of a young and beautiful woman, the delicate plenty of an opulent household, and the
respectful homage of the slaves, the freedmen, and the clients of a senatorial family. The
immense fortunes of the Roman ladies were gradually consumed in lavish alms and expensive
pilgrimages; and the artful monk, who had assigned himself the first, or possibly the sole place,
in the testament of his spiritual daughter, still presumed to declare, with the smooth face of
hypocrisy, that he was only the instrument of charity, and the steward of the poor. The lucrative,
but disgraceful, trade, which was exercised by the clergy to defraud the expectations of the
natural heirs, had provoked the indignation of a superstitious age: and two of the most
respectable of the Latin fathers very honestly confess, that the ignominious edict of Valentinian
was just and necessary; and that the Christian priests had deserved to lose a privilege, which was
still enjoyed by comedians, charioteers, and the ministers of idols. But the wisdom and authority
of the legislator are seldom victorious in a contest with the vigilant dexterity of private interest;
and Jerom, or Ambrose, might patiently acquiesce in the justice of an ineffectual or salutary law.
If the ecclesiastics were checked in the pursuit of personal emolument, they would exert a more
laudable industry to increase the wealth of the church; and dignify their covetousness with the
specious names of piety and patriotism.
Damasus, bishop of Rome, who was constrained to stigmatize the avarice of his clergy by the
publication of the law of Valentinian, had the good sense, or the good fortune, to engage in his
service the zeal and abilities of the learned Jerom; and the grateful saint has celebrated the merit
and purity of a very ambiguous character. But the splendid vices of the church of Rome, under
the reign of Valentinian and Damasus, have been curiously observed by the historian Ammianus,
who delivers his impartial sense in these expressive words: "The præfecture of Juventius was
accompanied with peace and plenty, but the tranquillity of his government was soon disturbed by
a bloody sedition of the distracted people. The ardor of Damasus and Ursinus, to seize the
episcopal seat, surpassed the ordinary measure of human ambition. They contended with the
rage of party; the quarrel was maintained by the wounds and death of their followers; and the
præfect, unable to resist or appease the tumult, was constrained, by superior violence, to retire
into the suburbs. Damasus prevailed: the well-disputed victory remained on the side of his
faction; one hundred and thirty-seven dead bodies were found in the Basilica of Sicininus,
where the Christians hold their religious assemblies; and it was long before the angry minds of
the people resumed their accustomed tranquillity. When I consider the splendor of the capital, I
am not astonished that so valuable a prize should inflame the desires of ambitious men, and
produce the fiercest and most obstinate contests. The successful candidate is secure, that he will
be enriched by the offerings of matrons; that, as soon as his dress is composed with becoming
care and elegance, he may proceed, in his chariot, through the streets of Rome; and that the
sumptuousness of the Imperial table will not equal the profuse and delicate entertainments
provided by the taste, and at the expense, of the Roman pontiffs. How much more rationally
(continues the honest Pagan) would those pontiffs consult their true happiness, if, instead of
alleging the greatness of the city as an excuse for their manners, they would imitate the
exemplary life of some provincial bishops, whose temperance and sobriety, whose mean apparel
and downcast looks, recommend their pure and modest virtue to the Deity and his true
worshippers!" The schism of Damasus and Ursinus was extinguished by the exile of the latter;
and the wisdom of the præfect Prætextatus restored the tranquillity of the city. Prætextatus was
a philosophic Pagan, a man of learning, of taste, and politeness; who disguised a reproach in the
form of a jest, when he assured Damasus, that if he could obtain the bishopric of Rome, he
himself would immediately embrace the Christian religion. This lively picture of the wealth and
luxury of the popes in the fourth century becomes the more curious, as it represents the
intermediate degree between the humble poverty of the apostolic fishermen, and the royal state
of a temporal prince, whose dominions extend from the confines of Naples to the banks of the
Po.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire. -- Part IV.
When the suffrage of the generals and of the army committed the sceptre of the Roman empire
to the hands of Valentinian, his reputation in arms, his military skill and experience, and his
rigid attachment to the forms, as well as spirit, of ancient discipline, were the principal motives
of their judicious choice. The eagerness of the troops, who pressed him to nominate his
colleague, was justified by the dangerous situation of public affairs; and Valentinian himself was
conscious, that the abilities of the most active mind were unequal to the defence of the distant
frontiers of an invaded monarchy. As soon as the death of Julian had relieved the Barbarians
from the terror of his name, the most sanguine hopes of rapine and conquest excited the nations
of the East, of the North, and of the South. Their inroads were often vexatious, and sometimes
formidable; but, during the twelve years of the reign of Valentinian, his firmness and vigilance
protected his own dominions; and his powerful genius seemed to inspire and direct the feeble
counsels of his brother. Perhaps the method of annals would more forcibly express the urgent
and divided cares of the two emperors; but the attention of the reader, likewise, would be
distracted by a tedious and desultory narrative. A separate view of the five great theatres of war;
I. Germany; II. Britain; III. Africa; IV. The East; and, V. The Danube; will impress a more
distinct image of the military state of the empire under the reigns of Valentinian and Valens.
I. The ambassadors of the Alemanni had been offended by the harsh and haughty behavior of
Ursacius, master of the offices; who by an act of unseasonable parsimony, had diminished the
value, as well as the quantity, of the presents to which they were entitled, either from custom or
treaty, on the accession of a new emperor. They expressed, and they communicated to their
countrymen, their strong sense of the national affront. The irascible minds of the chiefs were
exasperated by the suspicion of contempt; and the martial youth crowded to their standard.
Before Valentinian could pass the Alps, the villages of Gaul were in flames; before his general
Degalaiphus could encounter the Alemanni, they had secured the captives and the spoil in the
forests of Germany. In the beginning of the ensuing year, the military force of the whole nation,
in deep and solid columns, broke through the barrier of the Rhine, during the severity of a
northern winter. Two Roman counts were defeated and mortally wounded; and the standard of
the Heruli and Batavians fell into the hands of the Heruli and Batavians fell into the hands of the
conquerors, who displayed, with insulting shouts and menaces, the trophy of their victory. The
standard was recovered; but the Batavians had not redeemed the shame of their disgrace and
flight in the eyes of their severe judge. It was the opinion of Valentinian, that his soldiers must
learn to fear their commander, before they could cease to fear the enemy. The troops were
solemnly assembled; and the trembling Batavians were enclosed within the circle of the Imperial
army. Valentinian then ascended his tribunal; and, as if he disdained to punish cowardice with
death, he inflicted a stain of indelible ignominy on the officers, whose misconduct and
pusillanimity were found to be the first occasion of the defeat. The Batavians were degraded
from their rank, stripped of their arms, and condemned to be sold for slaves to the highest
bidder. At this tremendous sentence, the troops fell prostrate on the ground, deprecated the
indignation of their sovereign, and protested, that, if he would indulge them in another trial, they
would approve themselves not unworthy of the name of Romans, and of his soldiers.
Valentinian, with affected reluctance, yielded to their entreaties; the Batavians resumed their
arms, and with their arms, the invincible resolution of wiping away their disgrace in the blood of
the Alemanni. The principal command was declined by Dagalaiphus; and that experienced
general, who had represented, perhaps with too much prudence, the extreme difficulties of the
undertaking, had the mortification, before the end of the campaign, of seeing his rival Jovinus
convert those difficulties into a decisive advantage over the scattered forces of the Barbarians.
At the head of a well-disciplined army of cavalry, infantry, and light troops, Jovinus advanced,
with cautious and rapid steps, to Scarponna, * in the territory of Metz, where he surprised a
large division of the Alemanni, before they had time to run to their arms; and flushed his soldiers
with the confidence of an easy and bloodless victory. Another division, or rather army, of the
enemy, after the cruel and wanton devastation of the adjacent country, reposed themselves on
the shady banks of the Moselle. Jovinus, who had viewed the ground with the eye of a general,
made a silent approach through a deep and woody vale, till he could distinctly perceive the
indolent security of the Germans. Some were bathing their huge limbs in the river; others were
combing their long and flaxen hair; others again were swallowing large draughts of rich and
delicious wine. On a sudden they heard the sound of the Roman trumpet; they saw the enemy in
their camp. Astonishment produced disorder; disorder was followed by flight and dismay; and
the confused multitude of the bravest warriors was pierced by the swords and javelins of the
legionaries and auxiliaries. The fugitives escaped to the third, and most considerable, camp, in
the Catalonian plains, near Chalons in Champagne: the straggling detachments were hastily
recalled to their standard; and the Barbarian chiefs, alarmed and admonished by the fate of their
companions, prepared to encounter, in a decisive battle, the victorious forces of the lieutenant of
Valentinian. The bloody and obstinate conflict lasted a whole summer's day, with equal valor,
and with alternate success. The Romans at length prevailed, with the loss of about twelve
hundred men. Six thousand of the Alemanni were slain, four thousand were wounded; and the
brave Jovinus, after chasing the flying remnant of their host as far as the banks of the Rhine,
returned to Paris, to receive the applause of his sovereign, and the ensigns of the consulship for
the ensuing year. The triumph of the Romans was indeed sullied by their treatment of the
captive king, whom they hung on a gibbet, without the knowledge of their indignant general.
This disgraceful act of cruelty, which might be imputed to the fury of the troops, was followed
by the deliberate murder of Withicab, the son of Vadomair; a German prince, of a weak and
sickly constitution, but of a daring and formidable spirit. The domestic assassin was instigated
and protected by the Romans; and the violation of the laws of humanity and justice betrayed
their secret apprehension of the weakness of the declining empire. The use of the dagger is
seldom adopted in public councils, as long as they retain any confidence in the power of the
sword.
While the Alemanni appeared to be humbled by their recent calamities, the pride of Valentinian
was mortified by the unexpected surprisal of Moguntiacum, or Mentz, the principal city of the
Upper Germany. In the unsuspicious moment of a Christian festival, * Rando, a bold and artful
chieftain, who had long meditated his attempt, suddenly passed the Rhine; entered the
defenceless town, and retired with a multitude of captives of either sex. Valentinian resolved to
execute severe vengeance on the whole body of the nation. Count Sebastian, with the bands of
Italy and Illyricum, was ordered to invade their country, most probably on the side of Rhætia.
The emperor in person, accompanied by his son Gratian, passed the Rhine at the head of a
formidable army, which was supported on both flanks by Jovinus and Severus, the two
masters-general of the cavalry and infantry of the West. The Alemanni, unable to prevent the
devastation of their villages, fixed their camp on a lofty, and almost inaccessible, mountain, in
the modern duchy of Wirtemberg, and resolutely expected the approach of the Romans. The life
of Valentinian was exposed to imminent danger by the intrepid curiosity with which he persisted
to explore some secret and unguarded path. A troop of Barbarians suddenly rose from their
ambuscade: and the emperor, who vigorously spurred his horse down a steep and slippery
descent, was obliged to leave behind him his armor-bearer, and his helmet, magnificently
enriched with gold and precious stones. At the signal of the general assault, the Roman troops
encompassed and ascended the mountain of Solicinium on three different sides. Every step
which they gained, increased their ardor, and abated the resistance of the enemy: and after their
united forces had occupied the summit of the hill, they impetuously urged the Barbarians down
the northern descent, where Count Sebastian was posted to intercept their retreat. After this
signal victory, Valentinian returned to his winter quarters at Treves; where he indulged the
public joy by the exhibition of splendid and triumphal games. But the wise monarch, instead of
aspiring to the conquest of Germany, confined his attention to the important and laborious
defence of the Gallic frontier, against an enemy whose strength was renewed by a stream of
daring volunteers, which incessantly flowed from the most distant tribes of the North. The
banks of the Rhine from its source to the straits of the ocean, were closely planted with strong
castles and convenient towers; new works, and new arms, were invented by the ingenuity of a
prince who was skilled in the mechanical arts; and his numerous levies of Roman and Barbarian
youth were severely trained in all the exercises of war. The progress of the work, which was
sometimes opposed by modest representations, and sometimes by hostile attempts, secured the
tranquillity of Gaul during the nine subsequent years of the administration of Valentinian.
That prudent emperor, who diligently practised the wise maxims of Diocletian, was studious to
foment and excite the intestine divisions of the tribes of Germany. About the middle of the
fourth century, the countries, perhaps of Lusace and Thuringia, on either side of the Elbe, were
occupied by the vague dominion of the Burgundians; a warlike and numerous people, * of the
Vandal race, whose obscure name insensibly swelled into a powerful kingdom, and has finally
settled on a flourishing province. The most remarkable circumstance in the ancient manners of
the Burgundians appears to have been the difference of their civil and ecclesiastical constitution.
The appellation of Hendinos was given to the king or general, and the title of Sinistus to the
high priest, of the nation. The person of the priest was sacred, and his dignity perpetual; but the
temporal government was held by a very precarious tenure. If the events of war accuses the
courage or conduct of the king, he was immediately deposed; and the injustice of his subjects
made him responsible for the fertility of the earth, and the regularity of the seasons, which
seemed to fall more properly within the sacerdotal department. The disputed possession of some
salt-pits engaged the Alemanni and the Burgundians in frequent contests: the latter were easily
tempted, by the secret solicitations and liberal offers of the emperor; and their fabulous descent
from the Roman soldiers, who had formerly been left to garrison the fortresses of Drusus, was
admitted with mutual credulity, as it was conducive to mutual interest. An army of fourscore
thousand Burgundians soon appeared on the banks of the Rhine; and impatiently required the
support and subsidies which Valentinian had promised: but they were amused with excuses and
delays, till at length, after a fruitless expectation, they were compelled to retire. The arms and
fortifications of the Gallic frontier checked the fury of their just resentment; and their massacre
of the captives served to imbitter the hereditary feud of the Burgundians and the Alemanni. The
inconstancy of a wise prince may, perhaps, be explained by some alteration of circumstances;
and perhaps it was the original design of Valentinian to intimidate, rather than to destroy; as the
balance of power would have been equally overturned by the extirpation of either of the German
nations. Among the princes of the Alemanni, Macrianus, who, with a Roman name, had assumed
the arts of a soldier and a statesman, deserved his hatred and esteem. The emperor himself, with
a light and unencumbered band, condescended to pass the Rhine, marched fifty miles into the
country, and would infallibly have seized the object of his pursuit, if his judicious measures had
not been defeated by the impatience of the troops. Macrianus was afterwards admitted to the
honor of a personal conference with the emperor; and the favors which he received, fixed him,
till the hour of his death, a steady and sincere friend of the republic.
The land was covered by the fortifications of Valentinian; but the sea-coast of Gaul and Britain
was exposed to the depredations of the Saxons. That celebrated name, in which we have a dear
and domestic interest, escaped the notice of Tacitus; and in the maps of Ptolemy, it faintly marks
the narrow neck of the Cimbric peninsula, and three small islands towards the mouth of the
Elbe. This contracted territory, the present duchy of Sleswig, or perhaps of Holstein, was
incapable of pouring forth the inexhaustible swarms of Saxons who reigned over the ocean, who
filled the British island with their language, their laws, and their colonies; and who so long
defended the liberty of the North against the arms of Charlemagne. The solution of this
difficulty is easily derived from the similar manners, and loose constitution, of the tribes of
Germany; which were blended with each other by the slightest accidents of war or friendship.
The situation of the native Saxons disposed them to embrace the hazardous professions of
fishermen and pirates; and the success of their first adventures would naturally excite the
emulation of their bravest countrymen, who were impatient of the gloomy solitude of their
woods and mountains. Every tide might float down the Elbe whole fleets of canoes, filled with
hardy and intrepid associates, who aspired to behold the unbounded prospect of the ocean, and to
taste the wealth and luxury of unknown worlds. It should seem probable, however, that the most
numerous auxiliaries of the Saxons were furnished by the nations who dwelt along the shores of
the Baltic. They possessed arms and ships, the art of navigation, and the habits of naval war; but
the difficulty of issuing through the northern columns of Hercules (which, during several
months of the year, are obstructed with ice) confined their skill and courage within the limits of
a spacious lake. The rumor of the successful armaments which sailed from the mouth of the
Elbe, would soon provoke them to cross the narrow isthmus of Sleswig, and to launch their
vessels on the great sea. The various troops of pirates and adventurers, who fought under the
same standard, were insensibly united in a permanent society, at first of rapine, and afterwards
of government. A military confederation was gradually moulded into a national body, by the
gentle operation of marriage and consanguinity; and the adjacent tribes, who solicited the
alliance, accepted the name and laws, of the Saxons. If the fact were not established by the most
unquestionable evidence, we should appear to abuse the credulity of our readers, by the
description of the vessels in which the Saxon pirates ventured to sport in the waves of the
German Ocean, the British Channel, and the Bay of Biscay. The keel of their large flat-bottomed
boats were framed of light timber, but the sides and upper works consisted only of wicker, with a
covering of strong hides. In the course of their slow and distant navigations, they must always
have been exposed to the danger, and very frequently to the misfortune, of shipwreck; and the
naval annals of the Saxons were undoubtedly filled with the accounts of the losses which they
sustained on the coasts of Britain and Gaul. But the daring spirit of the pirates braved the perils
both of the sea and of the shore: their skill was confirmed by the habits of enterprise; the
meanest of their mariners was alike capable of handling an oar, of rearing a sail, or of
conducting a vessel, and the Saxons rejoiced in the appearance of a tempest, which concealed
their design, and dispersed the fleets of the enemy. After they had acquired an accurate
knowledge of the maritime provinces of the West, they extended the scene of their depredations,
and the most sequestered places had no reason to presume on their security. The Saxon boats
drew so little water that they could easily proceed fourscore or a hundred miles up the great
rivers; their weight was so inconsiderable, that they were transported on wagons from one river
to another; and the pirates who had entered the mouth of the Seine, or of the Rhine, might
descend, with the rapid stream of the Rhone, into the Mediterranean. Under the reign of
Valentinian, the maritime provinces of Gaul were afflicted by the Saxons: a military count was
stationed for the defence of the sea-coast, or Armorican limit; and that officer, who found his
strength, or his abilities, unequal to the task, implored the assistance of Severus, master-general
of the infantry. The Saxons, surrounded and outnumbered, were forced to relinquish their spoil,
and to yield a select band of their tall and robust youth to serve in the Imperial armies. They
stipulated only a safe and honorable retreat; and the condition was readily granted by the Roman
general, who meditated an act of perfidy, imprudent as it was inhuman, while a Saxon remained
alive, and in arms, to revenge the fate of their countrymen. The premature eagerness of the
infantry, who were secretly posted in a deep valley, betrayed the ambuscade; and they would
perhaps have fallen the victims of their own treachery, if a large body of cuirassiers, alarmed by
the noise of the combat, had not hastily advanced to extricate their companions, and to
overwhelm the undaunted valor of the Saxons. Some of the prisoners were saved from the edge
of the sword, to shed their blood in the amphitheatre; and the orator Symmachus complains, that
twenty-nine of those desperate savages, by strangling themselves with their own hands, had
disappointed the amusement of the public. Yet the polite and philosophic citizens of Rome were
impressed with the deepest horror, when they were informed, that the Saxons consecrated to the
gods the tithe of their human spoil; and that they ascertained by lot the objects of the barbarous
sacrifice.
II. The fabulous colonies of Egyptians and Trojans, of Scandinavians and Spaniards, which
flattered the pride, and amused the credulity, of our rude ancestors, have insensibly vanished in
the light of science and philosophy. The present age is satisfied with the simple and rational
opinion, that the islands of Great Britain and Ireland were gradually peopled from the adjacent
continent of Gaul. From the coast of Kent, to the extremity of Caithness and Ulster, the memory
of a Celtic origin was distinctly preserved, in the perpetual resemblance of language, of religion,
and of manners; and the peculiar characters of the British tribes might be naturally ascribed to
the influence of accidental and local circumstances. The Roman Province was reduced to the
state of civilized and peaceful servitude; the rights of savage freedom were contracted to the
narrow limits of Caledonia. The inhabitants of that northern region were divided, as early as the
reign of Constantine, between the two great tribes of the Scots and of the Picts, who have since
experienced a very different fortune. The power, and almost the memory, of the Picts have been
extinguished by their successful rivals; and the Scots, after maintaining for ages the dignity of an
independent kingdom, have multiplied, by an equal and voluntary union, the honors of the
English name. The hand of nature had contributed to mark the ancient distinctions of the Scots
and Picts. The former were the men of the hills, and the latter those of the plain. The eastern
coast of Caledonia may be considered as a level and fertile country, which, even in a rude state
of tillage, was capable of producing a considerable quantity of corn; and the epithet of cruitnich,
or wheat-eaters, expressed the contempt or envy of the carnivorous highlander. The cultivation
of the earth might introduce a more accurate separation of property, and the habits of a sedentary
life; but the love of arms and rapine was still the ruling passion of the Picts; and their warriors,
who stripped themselves for a day of battle, were distinguished, in the eyes of the Romans, by
the strange fashion of painting their naked bodies with gaudy colors and fantastic figures. The
western part of Caledonia irregularly rises into wild and barren hills, which scarcely repay the
toil of the husbandman, and are most profitably used for the pasture of cattle. The highlanders
were condemned to the occupations of shepherds and hunters; and, as they seldom were fixed to
any permanent habitation, they acquired the expressive name of Scots, which, in the Celtic
tongue, is said to be equivalent to that of wanderers, or vagrants. The inhabitants of a barren
land were urged to seek a fresh supply of food in the waters. The deep lakes and bays which
intersect their country, are plentifully supplied with fish; and they gradually ventured to cast
their nets in the waves of the ocean. The vicinity of the Hebrides, so profusely scattered along
the western coast of Scotland, tempted their curiosity, and improved their skill; and they
acquired, by slow degrees, the art, or rather the habit, of managing their boats in a tempestuous
sea, and of steering their nocturnal course by the light of the well-known stars. The two bold
headlands of Caledonia almost touch the shores of a spacious island, which obtained, from its
luxuriant vegetation, the epithet of Green; and has preserved, with a slight alteration, the name
of Erin, or Ierne, or Ireland. It is probable, that in some remote period of antiquity, the fertile
plains of Ulster received a colony of hungry Scots; and that the strangers of the North, who had
dared to encounter the arms of the legions, spread their conquests over the savage and unwarlike
natives of a solitary island. It is certain, that, in the declining age of the Roman empire,
Caledonia, Ireland, and the Isle of Man, were inhabited by the Scots, and that the kindred tribes,
who were often associated in military enterprise, were deeply affected by the various accidents
of their mutual fortunes. They long cherished the lively tradition of their common name and
origin; and the missionaries of the Isle of Saints, who diffused the light of Christianity over
North Britain, established the vain opinion, that their Irish countrymen were the natural, as well
as spiritual, fathers of the Scottish race. The loose and obscure tradition has been preserved by
the venerable Bede, who scattered some rays of light over the darkness of the eighth century. On
this slight foundation, a huge superstructure of fable was gradually reared, by the bards and the
monks; two orders of men, who equally abused the privilege of fiction. The Scottish nation, with
mistaken pride, adopted their Irish genealogy; and the annals of a long line of imaginary kings
have been adorned by the fancy of Boethius, and the classic elegance of Buchanan.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire. -- Part V.
Six years after the death of Constantine, the destructive inroads of the Scots and Picts required
the presence of his youngest son, who reigned in the Western empire. Constans visited his
British dominions: but we may form some estimate of the importance of his achievements, by
the language of panegyric, which celebrates only his triumph over the elements or, in other
words, the good fortune of a safe and easy passage from the port of Boulogne to the harbor of
Sandwich. The calamities which the afflicted provincials continued to experience, from foreign
war and domestic tyranny, were aggravated by the feeble and corrupt administration of the
eunuchs of Constantius; and the transient relief which they might obtain from the virtues of
Julian, was soon lost by the absence and death of their benefactor. The sums of gold and silver,
which had been painfully collected, or liberally transmitted, for the payment of the troops, were
intercepted by the avarice of the commanders; discharges, or, at least, exemptions, from the
military service, were publicly sold; the distress of the soldiers, who were injuriously deprived of
their legal and scanty subsistence, provoked them to frequent desertion; the nerves of discipline
were relaxed, and the highways were infested with robbers. The oppression of the good, and the
impunity of the wicked, equally contributed to diffuse through the island a spirit of discontent
and revolt; and every ambitious subject, every desperate exile, might entertain a reasonable hope
of subverting the weak and distracted government of Britain. The hostile tribes of the North,
who detested the pride and power of the King of the World, suspended their domestic feuds; and
the Barbarians of the land and sea, the Scots, the Picts, and the Saxons, spread themselves with
rapid and irresistible fury, from the wall of Antoninus to the shores of Kent. Every production of
art and nature, every object of convenience and luxury, which they were incapable of creating by
labor or procuring by trade, was accumulated in the rich and fruitful province of Britain. A
philosopher may deplore the eternal discords of the human race, but he will confess, that the
desire of spoil is a more rational provocation than the vanity of conquest. From the age of
Constantine to the Plantagenets, this rapacious spirit continued to instigate the poor and hardy
Caledonians; but the same people, whose generous humanity seems to inspire the songs of
Ossian, was disgraced by a savage ignorance of the virtues of peace, and of the laws of war.
Their southern neighbors have felt, and perhaps exaggerated, the cruel depredations of the Scots
and Picts; and a valiant tribe of Caledonia, the Attacotti, the enemies, and afterwards the
soldiers, of Valentinian, are accused, by an eye-witness, of delighting in the taste of human flesh.
When they hunted the woods for prey, it is said, that they attacked the shepherd rather than his
flock; and that they curiously selected the most delicate and brawny parts, both of males and
females, which they prepared for their horrid repasts. If, in the neighborhood of the commercial
and literary town of Glasgow, a race of cannibals has really existed, we may contemplate, in the
period of the Scottish history, the opposite extremes of savage and civilized life. Such reflections
tend to enlarge the circle of our ideas; and to encourage the pleasing hope, that New Zealand
may produce, in some future age, the Hume of the Southern Hemisphere.
Every messenger who escaped across the British Channel, conveyed the most melancholy and
alarming tidings to the ears of Valentinian; and the emperor was soon informed that the two
military commanders of the province had been surprised and cut off by the Barbarians. Severus,
count of the domestics, was hastily despatched, and as suddenly recalled, by the court of Treves.
The representations of Jovinus served only to indicate the greatness of the evil; and, after a long
and serious consultation, the defence, or rather the recovery, of Britain was intrusted to the
abilities of the brave Theodosius. The exploits of that general, the father of a line of emperors,
have been celebrated, with peculiar complacency, by the writers of the age: but his real merit
deserved their applause; and his nomination was received, by the army and province, as a sure
presage of approaching victory. He seized the favorable moment of navigation, and securely
landed the numerous and veteran bands of the Heruli and Batavians, the Jovians and the Victors.
In his march from Sandwich to London, Theodosius defeated several parties of the Barbarians,
released a multitude of captives, and, after distributing to his soldiers a small portion of the
spoil, established the fame of disinterested justice, by the restitution of the remainder to the
rightful proprietors. The citizens of London, who had almost despaired of their safety, threw
open their gates; and as soon as Theodosius had obtained from the court of Treves the important
aid of a military lieutenant, and a civil governor, he executed, with wisdom and vigor, the
laborious task of the deliverance of Britain. The vagrant soldiers were recalled to their standard;
an edict of amnesty dispelled the public apprehensions; and his cheerful example alleviated the
rigor of martial discipline. The scattered and desultory warfare of the Barbarians, who infested
the land and sea, deprived him of the glory of a signal victory; but the prudent spirit, and
consummate art, of the Roman general, were displayed in the operations of two campaigns,
which successively rescued every part of the province from the hands of a cruel and rapacious
enemy. The splendor of the cities, and the security of the fortifications, were diligently restored,
by the paternal care of Theodosius; who with a strong hand confined the trembling Caledonians
to the northern angle of the island; and perpetuated, by the name and settlement of the new
province of Valentia, the glories of the reign of Valentinian. The voice of poetry and panegyric
may add, perhaps with some degree of truth, that the unknown regions of Thule were stained
with the blood of the Picts; that the oars of Theodosius dashed the waves of the Hyperborean
ocean; and that the distant Orkneys were the scene of his naval victory over the Saxon pirates.
He left the province with a fair, as well as splendid, reputation; and was immediately promoted
to the rank of master-general of the cavalry, by a prince who could applaud, without envy, the
merit of his servants. In the important station of the Upper Danube, the conqueror of Britain
checked and defeated the armies of the Alemanni, before he was chosen to suppress the revolt of
Africa.
III. The prince who refuses to be the judge, instructs the people to consider him as the
accomplice, of his ministers. The military command of Africa had been long exercised by Count
Romanus, and his abilities were not inadequate to his station; but, as sordid interest was the sole
motive of his conduct, he acted, on most occasions, as if he had been the enemy of the province,
and the friend of the Barbarians of the desert. The three flourishing cities of Oea, Leptis, and
Sabrata, which, under the name of Tripoli, had long constituted a federal union, were obliged,
for the first time, to shut their gates against a hostile invasion; several of their most honorable
citizens were surprised and massacred; the villages, and even the suburbs, were pillaged; and the
vines and fruit trees of that rich territory were extirpated by the malicious savages of Getulia.
The unhappy provincials implored the protection of Romanus; but they soon found that their
military governor was not less cruel and rapacious than the Barbarians. As they were incapable
of furnishing the four thousand camels, and the exorbitant present, which he required, before he
would march to the assistance of Tripoli; his demand was equivalent to a refusal, and he might
justly be accused as the author of the public calamity. In the annual assembly of the three cities,
they nominated two deputies, to lay at the feet of Valentinian the customary offering of a gold
victory; and to accompany this tribute of duty, rather than of gratitude, with their humble
complaint, that they were ruined by the enemy, and betrayed by their governor. If the severity of
Valentinian had been rightly directed, it would have fallen on the guilty head of Romanus. But
the count, long exercised in the arts of corruption, had despatched a swift and trusty messenger
to secure the venal friendship of Remigius, master of the offices. The wisdom of the Imperial
council was deceived by artifice; and their honest indignation was cooled by delay. At length,
when the repetition of complaint had been justified by the repetition of public misfortunes, the
notary Palladius was sent from the court of Treves, to examine the state of Africa, and the
conduct of Romanus. The rigid impartiality of Palladius was easily disarmed: he was tempted to
reserve for himself a part of the public treasure, which he brought with him for the payment of
the troops; and from the moment that he was conscious of his own guilt, he could no longer
refuse to attest the innocence and merit of the count. The charge of the Tripolitans was declared
to be false and frivolous; and Palladius himself was sent back from Treves to Africa, with a
special commission to discover and prosecute the authors of this impious conspiracy against the
representatives of the sovereign. His inquiries were managed with so much dexterity and
success, that he compelled the citizens of Leptis, who had sustained a recent siege of eight days,
to contradict the truth of their own decrees, and to censure the behavior of their own deputies. A
bloody sentence was pronounced, without hesitation, by the rash and headstrong cruelty of
Valentinian. The president of Tripoli, who had presumed to pity the distress of the province, was
publicly executed at Utica; four distinguished citizens were put to death, as the accomplices of
the imaginary fraud; and the tongues of two others were cut out, by the express order of the
emperor. Romanus, elated by impunity, and irritated by resistance, was still continued in the
military command; till the Africans were provoked, by his avarice, to join the rebellious standard
of Firmus, the Moor.
His father Nabal was one of the richest and most powerful of the Moorish princes, who
acknowledged the supremacy of Rome. But as he left, either by his wives or concubines, a very
numerous posterity, the wealthy inheritance was eagerly disputed; and Zamma, one of his sons,
was slain in a domestic quarrel by his brother Firmus. The implacable zeal, with which Romanus
prosecuted the legal revenge of this murder, could be ascribed only to a motive of avarice, or
personal hatred; but, on this occasion, his claims were just; his influence was weighty; and
Firmus clearly understood, that he must either present his neck to the executioner, or appeal
from the sentence of the Imperial consistory, to his sword, and to the people. He was received as
the deliverer of his country; and, as soon as it appeared that Romanus was formidable only to a
submissive province, the tyrant of Africa became the object of universal contempt. The ruin of
Cæsarea, which was plundered and burnt by the licentious Barbarians, convinced the refractory
cities of the danger of resistance; the power of Firmus was established, at least in the provinces
of Mauritania and Numidia; and it seemed to be his only doubt whether he should assume the
diadem of a Moorish king, or the purple of a Roman emperor. But the imprudent and unhappy
Africans soon discovered, that, in this rash insurrection, they had not sufficiently consulted their
own strength, or the abilities of their leader. Before he could procure any certain intelligence,
that the emperor of the West had fixed the choice of a general, or that a fleet of transports was
collected at the mouth of the Rhone, he was suddenly informed that the great Theodosius, with a
small band of veterans, had landed near Igilgilis, or Gigeri, on the African coast; and the timid
usurper sunk under the ascendant of virtue and military genius. Though Firmus possessed arms
and treasures, his despair of victory immediately reduced him to the use of those arts, which, in
the same country, and in a similar situation, had formerly been practised by the crafty Jugurtha.
He attempted to deceive, by an apparent submission, the vigilance of the Roman general; to
seduce the fidelity of his troops; and to protract the duration of the war, by successively
engaging the independent tribes of Africa to espouse his quarrel, or to protect his flight.
Theodosius imitated the example, and obtained the success, of his predecessor Metellus. When
Firmus, in the character of a suppliant, accused his own rashness, and humbly solicited the
clemency of the emperor, the lieutenant of Valentinian received and dismissed him with a
friendly embrace: but he diligently required the useful and substantial pledges of a sincere
repentance; nor could he be persuaded, by the assurances of peace, to suspend, for an instant, the
operations of an active war. A dark conspiracy was detected by the penetration of Theodosius;
and he satisfied, without much reluctance, the public indignation, which he had secretly excited.
Several of the guilty accomplices of Firmus were abandoned, according to ancient custom, to the
tumult of a military execution; many more, by the amputation of both their hands, continued to
exhibit an instructive spectacle of horror; the hatred of the rebels was accompanied with fear;
and the fear of the Roman soldiers was mingled with respectful admiration. Amidst the
boundless plains of Getulia, and the innumerable valleys of Mount Atlas, it was impossible to
prevent the escape of Firmus; and if the usurper could have tired the patience of his antagonist,
he would have secured his person in the depth of some remote solitude, and expected the hopes
of a future revolution. He was subdued by the perseverance of Theodosius; who had formed an
inflexible determination, that the war should end only by the death of the tyrant; and that every
nation of Africa, which presumed to support his cause, should be involved in his ruin. At the
head of a small body of troops, which seldom exceeded three thousand five hundred men, the
Roman general advanced, with a steady prudence, devoid of rashness or of fear, into the heart of
a country, where he was sometimes attacked by armies of twenty thousand Moors. The boldness
of his charge dismayed the irregular Barbarians; they were disconcerted by his seasonable and
orderly retreats; they were continually baffled by the unknown resources of the military art; and
they felt and confessed the just superiority which was assumed by the leader of a civilized
nation. When Theodosius entered the extensive dominions of Igmazen, king of the Isaflenses,
the haughty savage required, in words of defiance, his name, and the object of his expedition. "I
am," replied the stern and disdainful count, "I am the general of Valentinian, the lord of the
world; who has sent me hither to pursue and punish a desperate robber. Deliver him instantly
into my hands; and be assured, that if thou dost not obey the commands of my invincible
sovereign, thou, and the people over whom thou reignest, shall be utterly extirpated." * As soon
as Igmazen was satisfied, that his enemy had strength and resolution to execute the fatal menace,
he consented to purchase a necessary peace by the sacrifice of a guilty fugitive. The guards that
were placed to secure the person of Firmus deprived him of the hopes of escape; and the
Moorish tyrant, after wine had extinguished the sense of danger, disappointed the insulting
triumph of the Romans, by strangling himself in the night. His dead body, the only present which
Igmazen could offer to the conqueror, was carelessly thrown upon a camel; and Theodosius,
leading back his victorious troops to Sitifi, was saluted by the warmest acclamations of joy and
loyalty.
Africa had been lost by the vices of Romanus; it was restored by the virtues of Theodosius; and
our curiosity may be usefully directed to the inquiry of the respective treatment which the two
generals received from the Imperial court. The authority of Count Romanus had been suspended
by the master-general of the cavalry; and he was committed to safe and honorable custody till
the end of the war. His crimes were proved by the most authentic evidence; and the public
expected, with some impatience, the decree of severe justice. But the partial and powerful favor
of Mellobaudes encouraged him to challenge his legal judges, to obtain repeated delays for the
purpose of procuring a crowd of friendly witnesses, and, finally, to cover his guilty conduct, by
the additional guilt of fraud and forgery. About the same time, the restorer of Britain and Africa,
on a vague suspicion that his name and services were superior to the rank of a subject, was
ignominiously beheaded at Carthage. Valentinian no longer reigned; and the death of
Theodosius, as well as the impunity of Romanus, may justly be imputed to the arts of the
ministers, who abused the confidence, and deceived the inexperienced youth, of his sons.
If the geographical accuracy of Ammianus had been fortunately bestowed on the British exploits
of Theodosius, we should have traced, with eager curiosity, the distinct and domestic footsteps
of his march. But the tedious enumeration of the unknown and uninteresting tribes of Africa may
be reduced to the general remark, that they were all of the swarthy race of the Moors; that they
inhabited the back settlements of the Mauritanian and Numidian province, the country, as they
have since been termed by the Arabs, of dates and of locusts; and that, as the Roman power
declined in Africa, the boundary of civilized manners and cultivated land was insensibly
contracted. Beyond the utmost limits of the Moors, the vast and inhospitable desert of the South
extends above a thousand miles to the banks of the Niger. The ancients, who had a very faint and
imperfect knowledge of the great peninsula of Africa, were sometimes tempted to believe, that
the torrid zone must ever remain destitute of inhabitants; and they sometimes amused their
fancy by filling the vacant space with headless men, or rather monsters; with horned and
cloven-footed satyrs; with fabulous centaurs; and with human pygmies, who waged a bold and
doubtful warfare against the cranes. Carthage would have trembled at the strange intelligence
that the countries on either side of the equator were filled with innumerable nations, who
differed only in their color from the ordinary appearance of the human species: and the subjects
of the Roman empire might have anxiously expected, that the swarms of Barbarians, which
issued from the North, would soon be encountered from the South by new swarms of Barbarians,
equally fierce and equally formidable. These gloomy terrors would indeed have been dispelled
by a more intimate acquaintance with the character of their African enemies. The inaction of the
negroes does not seem to be the effect either of their virtue or of their pusillanimity. They
indulge, like the rest of mankind, their passions and appetites; and the adjacent tribes are
engaged in frequent acts of hostility. But their rude ignorance has never invented any effectual
weapons of defence, or of destruction; they appear incapable of forming any extensive plans of
government, or conquest; and the obvious inferiority of their mental faculties has been
discovered and abused by the nations of the temperate zone. Sixty thousand blacks are annually
embarked from the coast of Guinea, never to return to their native country; but they are
embarked in chains; and this constant emigration, which, in the space of two centuries, might
have furnished armies to overrun the globe, accuses the guilt of Europe, and the weakness of
Africa.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire. -- Part VI.
IV. The ignominious treaty, which saved the army of Jovian, had been faithfully executed on the
side of the Romans; and as they had solemnly renounced the sovereignty and alliance of
Armenia and Iberia, those tributary kingdoms were exposed, without protection, to the arms of
the Persian monarch. Sapor entered the Armenian territories at the head of a formidable host of
cuirassiers, of archers, and of mercenary foot; but it was the invariable practice of Sapor to mix
war and negotiation, and to consider falsehood and perjury as the most powerful instruments of
regal policy. He affected to praise the prudent and moderate conduct of the king of Armenia; and
the unsuspicious Tiranus was persuaded, by the repeated assurances of insidious friendship, to
deliver his person into the hands of a faithless and cruel enemy. In the midst of a splendid
entertainment, he was bound in chains of silver, as an honor due to the blood of the Arsacides;
and, after a short confinement in the Tower of Oblivion at Ecbatana, he was released from the
miseries of life, either by his own dagger, or by that of an assassin. * The kingdom of Armenia
was reduced to the state of a Persian province; the administration was shared between a
distinguished satrap and a favorite eunuch; and Sapor marched, without delay, to subdue the
martial spirit of the Iberians. Sauromaces, who reigned in that country by the permission of the
emperors, was expelled by a superior force; and, as an insult on the majesty of Rome, the king of
kings placed a diadem on the head of his abject vassal Aspacuras. The city of Artogerassa was
the only place of Armenia which presumed to resist the efforts of his arms. The treasure
deposited in that strong fortress tempted the avarice of Sapor; but the danger of Olympias, the
wife or widow of the Armenian king, excited the public compassion, and animated the desperate
valor of her subjects and soldiers. § The Persians were surprised and repulsed under the walls of
Artogerassa, by a bold and well-concerted sally of the besieged. But the forces of Sapor were
continually renewed and increased; the hopeless courage of the garrison was exhausted; the
strength of the walls yielded to the assault; and the proud conqueror, after wasting the rebellious
city with fire and sword, led away captive an unfortunate queen; who, in a more auspicious hour,
had been the destined bride of the son of Constantine. Yet if Sapor already triumphed in the
easy conquest of two dependent kingdoms, he soon felt, that a country is unsubdued as long as
the minds of the people are actuated by a hostile and contumacious spirit. The satraps, whom he
was obliged to trust, embraced the first opportunity of regaining the affection of their
countrymen, and of signalizing their immortal hatred to the Persian name. Since the conversion
of the Armenians and Iberians, these nations considered the Christians as the favorites, and the
Magians as the adversaries, of the Supreme Being: the influence of the clergy, over a
superstitious people was uniformly exerted in the cause of Rome; and as long as the successors
of Constantine disputed with those of Artaxerxes the sovereignty of the intermediate provinces,
the religious connection always threw a decisive advantage into the scale of the empire. A
numerous and active party acknowledged Para, the son of Tiranus, as the lawful sovereign of
Armenia, and his title to the throne was deeply rooted in the hereditary succession of five
hundred years. By the unanimous consent of the Iberians, the country was equally divided
between the rival princes; and Aspacuras, who owed his diadem to the choice of Sapor, was
obliged to declare, that his regard for his children, who were detained as hostages by the tyrant,
was the only consideration which prevented him from openly renouncing the alliance of Persia.
The emperor Valens, who respected the obligations of the treaty, and who was apprehensive of
involving the East in a dangerous war, ventured, with slow and cautious measures, to support the
Roman party in the kingdoms of Iberia and Armenia. $ Twelve legions established the authority
of Sauromaces on the banks of the Cyrus. The Euphrates was protected by the valor of
Arintheus. A powerful army, under the command of Count Trajan, and of Vadomair, king of the
Alemanni, fixed their camp on the confines of Armenia. But they were strictly enjoined not to
commit the first hostilities, which might be understood as a breach of the treaty: and such was
the implicit obedience of the Roman general, that they retreated, with exemplary patience, under
a shower of Persian arrows till they had clearly acquired a just title to an honorable and
legitimate victory. Yet these appearances of war insensibly subsided in a vain and tedious
negotiation. The contending parties supported their claims by mutual reproaches of perfidy and
ambition; and it should seem, that the original treaty was expressed in very obscure terms, since
they were reduced to the necessity of making their inconclusive appeal to the partial testimony
of the generals of the two nations, who had assisted at the negotiations. The invasion of the
Goths and Huns which soon afterwards shook the foundations of the Roman empire, exposed the
provinces of Asia to the arms of Sapor. But the declining age, and perhaps the infirmities, of the
monarch suggested new maxims of tranquillity and moderation. His death, which happened in
the full maturity of a reign of seventy years, changed in a moment the court and councils of
Persia; and their attention was most probably engaged by domestic troubles, and the distant
efforts of a Carmanian war. The remembrance of ancient injuries was lost in the enjoyment of
peace. The kingdoms of Armenia and Iberia were permitted, by the mutual, though tacit consent
of both empires, to resume their doubtful neutrality. In the first years of the reign of Theodosius,
a Persian embassy arrived at Constantinople, to excuse the unjustifiable measures of the former
reign; and to offer, as the tribute of friendship, or even of respect, a splendid present of gems, of
silk, and of Indian elephants.
In the general picture of the affairs of the East under the reign of Valens, the adventures of Para
form one of the most striking and singular objects. The noble youth, by the persuasion of his
mother Olympias, had escaped through the Persian host that besieged Artogerassa, and implored
the protection of the emperor of the East. By his timid councils, Para was alternately supported,
and recalled, and restored, and betrayed. The hopes of the Armenians were sometimes raised by
the presence of their natural sovereign, * and the ministers of Valens were satisfied, that they
preserved the integrity of the public faith, if their vassal was not suffered to assume the diadem
and title of King. But they soon repented of their own rashness. They were confounded by the
reproaches and threats of the Persian monarch. They found reason to distrust the cruel and
inconstant temper of Para himself; who sacrificed, to the slightest suspicions, the lives of his
most faithful servants, and held a secret and disgraceful correspondence with the assassin of his
father and the enemy of his country. Under the specious pretence of consulting with the emperor
on the subject of their common interest, Para was persuaded to descend from the mountains of
Armenia, where his party was in arms, and to trust his independence and safety to the discretion
of a perfidious court. The king of Armenia, for such he appeared in his own eyes and in those of
his nation, was received with due honors by the governors of the provinces through which he
passed; but when he arrived at Tarsus in Cilicia, his progress was stopped under various
pretences; his motions were watched with respectful vigilance, and he gradually discovered, that
he was a prisoner in the hands of the Romans. Para suppressed his indignation, dissembled his
fears, and after secretly preparing his escape, mounted on horseback with three hundred of his
faithful followers. The officer stationed at the door of his apartment immediately communicated
his flight to the consular of Cilicia, who overtook him in the suburbs, and endeavored without
success, to dissuade him from prosecuting his rash and dangerous design. A legion was ordered
to pursue the royal fugitive; but the pursuit of infantry could not be very alarming to a body of
light cavalry; and upon the first cloud of arrows that was discharged into the air, they retreated
with precipitation to the gates of Tarsus. After an incessant march of two days and two nights,
Para and his Armenians reached the banks of the Euphrates; but the passage of the river which
they were obliged to swim, * was attended with some delay and some loss. The country was
alarmed; and the two roads, which were only separated by an interval of three miles had been
occupied by a thousand archers on horseback, under the command of a count and a tribune. Para
must have yielded to superior force, if the accidental arrival of a friendly traveller had not
revealed the danger and the means of escape. A dark and almost impervious path securely
conveyed the Armenian troop through the thicket; and Para had left behind him the count and
the tribune, while they patiently expected his approach along the public highways. They returned
to the Imperial court to excuse their want of diligence or success; and seriously alleged, that the
king of Armenia, who was a skilful magician, had transformed himself and his followers, and
passed before their eyes under a borrowed shape. After his return to his native kingdom, Para
still continued to profess himself the friend and ally of the Romans: but the Romans had injured
him too deeply ever to forgive, and the secret sentence of his death was signed in the council of
Valens. The execution of the bloody deed was committed to the subtle prudence of Count
Trajan; and he had the merit of insinuating himself into the confidence of the credulous prince,
that he might find an opportunity of stabbing him to the heart Para was invited to a Roman
banquet, which had been prepared with all the pomp and sensuality of the East; the hall
resounded with cheerful music, and the company was already heated with wine; when the count
retired for an instant, drew his sword, and gave the signal of the murder. A robust and desperate
Barbarian instantly rushed on the king of Armenia; and though he bravely defended his life with
the first weapon that chance offered to his hand, the table of the Imperial general was stained
with the royal blood of a guest, and an ally. Such were the weak and wicked maxims of the
Roman administration, that, to attain a doubtful object of political interest the laws of nations,
and the sacred rights of hospitality were inhumanly violated in the face of the world.
V. During a peaceful interval of thirty years, the Romans secured their frontiers, and the Goths
extended their dominions. The victories of the great Hermanric, king of the Ostrogoths, and the
most noble of the race of the Amali, have been compared, by the enthusiasm of his countrymen,
to the exploits of Alexander; with this singular, and almost incredible, difference, that the
martial spirit of the Gothic hero, instead of being supported by the vigor of youth, was displayed
with glory and success in the extreme period of human life, between the age of fourscore and
one hundred and ten years. The independent tribes were persuaded, or compelled, to
acknowledge the king of the Ostrogoths as the sovereign of the Gothic nation: the chiefs of the
Visigoths, or Thervingi, renounced the royal title, and assumed the more humble appellation of
Judges; and, among those judges, Athanaric, Fritigern, and Alavivus, were the most illustrious,
by their personal merit, as well as by their vicinity to the Roman provinces. These domestic
conquests, which increased the military power of Hermanric, enlarged his ambitious designs. He
invaded the adjacent countries of the North; and twelve considerable nations, whose names and
limits cannot be accurately defined, successively yielded to the superiority of the Gothic arms
The Heruli, who inhabited the marshy lands near the lake Mæotis, were renowned for their
strength and agility; and the assistance of their light infantry was eagerly solicited, and highly
esteemed, in all the wars of the Barbarians. But the active spirit of the Heruli was subdued by the
slow and steady perseverance of the Goths; and, after a bloody action, in which the king was
slain, the remains of that warlike tribe became a useful accession to the camp of Hermanric. He
then marched against the Venedi; unskilled in the use of arms, and formidable only by their
numbers, which filled the wide extent of the plains of modern Poland. The victorious Goths,
who were not inferior in numbers, prevailed in the contest, by the decisive advantages of
exercise and discipline. After the submission of the Venedi, the conqueror advanced, without
resistance, as far as the confines of the Æstii; an ancient people, whose name is still preserved
in the province of Esthonia. Those distant inhabitants of the Baltic coast were supported by the
labors of agriculture, enriched by the trade of amber, and consecrated by the peculiar worship of
the Mother of the Gods. But the scarcity of iron obliged the Æstian warriors to content
themselves with wooden clubs; and the reduction of that wealthy country is ascribed to the
prudence, rather than to the arms, of Hermanric. His dominions, which extended from the
Danube to the Baltic, included the native seats, and the recent acquisitions, of the Goths; and he
reigned over the greatest part of Germany and Scythia with the authority of a conqueror, and
sometimes with the cruelty of a tyrant. But he reigned over a part of the globe incapable of
perpetuating and adorning the glory of its heroes. The name of Hermanric is almost buried in
oblivion; his exploits are imperfectly known; and the Romans themselves appeared unconscious
of the progress of an aspiring power which threatened the liberty of the North, and the peace of
the empire.
The Goths had contracted an hereditary attachment for the Imperial house of Constantine, of
whose power and liberality they had received so many signal proofs. They respected the public
peace; and if a hostile band sometimes presumed to pass the Roman limit, their irregular
conduct was candidly ascribed to the ungovernable spirit of the Barbarian youth. Their contempt
for two new and obscure princes, who had been raised to the throne by a popular election,
inspired the Goths with bolder hopes; and, while they agitated some design of marching their
confederate force under the national standard, they were easily tempted to embrace the party of
Procopius; and to foment, by their dangerous aid, the civil discord of the Romans. The public
treaty might stipulate no more than ten thousand auxiliaries; but the design was so zealously
adopted by the chiefs of the Visigoths, that the army which passed the Danube amounted to the
number of thirty thousand men. They marched with the proud confidence, that their invincible
valor would decide the fate of the Roman empire; and the provinces of Thrace groaned under the
weight of the Barbarians, who displayed the insolence of masters and the licentiousness of
enemies. But the intemperance which gratified their appetites, retarded their progress; and
before the Goths could receive any certain intelligence of the defeat and death of Procopius, they
perceived, by the hostile state of the country, that the civil and military powers were resumed by
his successful rival. A chain of posts and fortifications, skilfully disposed by Valens, or the
generals of Valens, resisted their march, prevented their retreat, and intercepted their
subsistence. The fierceness of the Barbarians was tamed and suspended by hunger; they
indignantly threw down their arms at the feet of the conqueror, who offered them food and
chains: the numerous captives were distributed in all the cities of the East; and the provincials,
who were soon familiarized with their savage appearance, ventured, by degrees, to measure their
own strength with these formidable adversaries, whose name had so long been the object of their
terror. The king of Scythia (and Hermanric alone could deserve so lofty a title) was grieved and
exasperated by this national calamity. His ambassadors loudly complained, at the court of
Valens, of the infraction of the ancient and solemn alliance, which had so long subsisted
between the Romans and the Goths. They alleged, that they had fulfilled the duty of allies, by
assisting the kinsman and successor of the emperor Julian; they required the immediate
restitution of the noble captives; and they urged a very singular claim, that the Gothic generals
marching in arms, and in hostile array, were entitled to the sacred character and privileges of
ambassadors. The decent, but peremptory, refusal of these extravagant demands, was signified to
the Barbarians by Victor, master-general of the cavalry; who expressed, with force and dignity,
the just complaints of the emperor of the East. The negotiation was interrupted; and the manly
exhortations of Valentinian encouraged his timid brother to vindicate the insulted majesty of the
empire.
The splendor and magnitude of this Gothic war are celebrated by a contemporary historian: but
the events scarcely deserve the attention of posterity, except as the preliminary steps of the
approaching decline and fall of the empire. Instead of leading the nations of Germany and
Scythia to the banks of the Danube, or even to the gates of Constantinople, the aged monarch of
the Goths resigned to the brave Athanaric the danger and glory of a defensive war, against an
enemy, who wielded with a feeble hand the powers of a mighty state. A bridge of boats was
established upon the Danube; the presence of Valens animated his troops; and his ignorance of
the art of war was compensated by personal bravery, and a wise deference to the advice of
Victor and Arintheus, his masters-general of the cavalry and infantry. The operations of the
campaign were conducted by their skill and experience; but they found it impossible to drive the
Visigoths from their strong posts in the mountains; and the devastation of the plains obliged the
Romans themselves to repass the Danube on the approach of winter. The incessant rains, which
swelled the waters of the river, produced a tacit suspension of arms, and confined the emperor
Valens, during the whole course of the ensuing summer, to his camp of Marcianopolis. The third
year of the war was more favorable to the Romans, and more pernicious to the Goths. The
interruption of trade deprived the Barbarians of the objects of luxury, which they already
confounded with the necessaries of life; and the desolation of a very extensive tract of country
threatened them with the horrors of famine. Athanaric was provoked, or compelled, to risk a
battle, which he lost, in the plains; and the pursuit was rendered more bloody by the cruel
precaution of the victorious generals, who had promised a large reward for the head of every
Goth that was brought into the Imperial camp. The submission of the Barbarians appeased the
resentment of Valens and his council: the emperor listened with satisfaction to the flattering and
eloquent remonstrance of the senate of Constantinople, which assumed, for the first time, a share
in the public deliberations; and the same generals, Victor and Arintheus, who had successfully
directed the conduct of the war, were empowered to regulate the conditions of peace. The
freedom of trade, which the Goths had hitherto enjoyed, was restricted to two cities on the
Danube; the rashness of their leaders was severely punished by the suppression of their pensions
and subsidies; and the exception, which was stipulated in favor of Athanaric alone, was more
advantageous than honorable to the Judge of the Visigoths. Athanaric, who, on this occasion,
appears to have consulted his private interest, without expecting the orders of his sovereign,
supported his own dignity, and that of his tribe, in the personal interview which was proposed by
the ministers of Valens. He persisted in his declaration, that it was impossible for him, without
incurring the guilt of perjury, ever to set his foot on the territory of the empire; and it is more
than probable, that his regard for the sanctity of an oath was confirmed by the recent and fatal
examples of Roman treachery. The Danube, which separated the dominions of the two
independent nations, was chosen for the scene of the conference. The emperor of the East, and
the Judge of the Visigoths, accompanied by an equal number of armed followers, advanced in
their respective barges to the middle of the stream. After the ratification of the treaty, and the
delivery of hostages, Valens returned in triumph to Constantinople; and the Goths remained in a
state of tranquillity about six years; till they were violently impelled against the Roman empire
by an innumerable host of Scythians, who appeared to issue from the frozen regions of the
North.
The emperor of the West, who had resigned to his brother the command of the Lower Danube,
reserved for his immediate care the defence of the Rhætian and Illyrian provinces, which spread
so many hundred miles along the greatest of the European rivers. The active policy of
Valentinian was continually employed in adding new fortifications to the security of the frontier:
but the abuse of this policy provoked the just resentment of the Barbarians. The Quadi
complained, that the ground for an intended fortress had been marked out on their territories;
and their complaints were urged with so much reason and moderation, that Equitius,
master-general of Illyricum, consented to suspend the prosecution of the work, till he should be
more clearly informed of the will of his sovereign. This fair occasion of injuring a rival, and of
advancing the fortune of his son, was eagerly embraced by the inhuman Maximin, the præfect,
or rather tyrant, of Gaul. The passions of Valentinian were impatient of control; and he
credulously listened to the assurances of his favorite, that if the government of Valeria, and the
direction of the work, were intrusted to the zeal of his son Marcellinus, the emperor should no
longer be importuned with the audacious remonstrances of the Barbarians. The subjects of
Rome, and the natives of Germany, were insulted by the arrogance of a young and worthless
minister, who considered his rapid elevation as the proof and reward of his superior merit. He
affected, however, to receive the modest application of Gabinius, king of the Quadi, with some
attention and regard: but this artful civility concealed a dark and bloody design, and the
credulous prince was persuaded to accept the pressing invitation of Marcellinus. I am at a loss
how to vary the narrative of similar crimes; or how to relate, that, in the course of the same year,
but in remote parts of the empire, the inhospitable table of two Imperial generals was stained
with the royal blood of two guests and allies, inhumanly murdered by their order, and in their
presence. The fate of Gabinius, and of Para, was the same: but the cruel death of their sovereign
was resented in a very different manner by the servile temper of the Armenians, and the free and
daring spirit of the Germans. The Quadi were much declined from that formidable power,
which, in the time of Marcus Antoninus, had spread terror to the gates of Rome. But they still
possessed arms and courage; their courage was animated by despair, and they obtained the usual
reenforcement of the cavalry of their Sarmatian allies. So improvident was the assassin
Marcellinus, that he chose the moment when the bravest veterans had been drawn away, to
suppress the revolt of Firmus; and the whole province was exposed, with a very feeble defence,
to the rage of the exasperated Barbarians. They invaded Pannonia in the season of harvest;
unmercifully destroyed every object of plunder which they could not easily transport; and either
disregarded, or demolished, the empty fortifications. The princess Constantia, the daughter of
the emperor Constantius, and the granddaughter of the great Constantine, very narrowly escaped.
That royal maid, who had innocently supported the revolt of Procopius, was now the destined
wife of the heir of the Western empire. She traversed the peaceful province with a splendid and
unarmed train. Her person was saved from danger, and the republic from disgrace, by the active
zeal of Messala, governor of the provinces. As soon as he was informed that the village, where
she stopped only to dine, was almost encompassed by the Barbarians, he hastily placed her in his
own chariot, and drove full speed till he reached the gates of Sirmium, which were at the
distance of six-and-twenty miles. Even Sirmium might not have been secure, if the Quadi and
Sarmatians had diligently advanced during the general consternation of the magistrates and
people. Their delay allowed Probus, the Prætorian præfect, sufficient time to recover his own
spirits, and to revive the courage of the citizens. He skilfully directed their strenuous efforts to
repair and strengthen the decayed fortifications; and procured the seasonable and effectual
assistance of a company of archers, to protect the capital of the Illyrian provinces. Disappointed
in their attempts against the walls of Sirmium, the indignant Barbarians turned their arms against
the master general of the frontier, to whom they unjustly attributed the murder of their king.
Equitius could bring into the field no more than two legions; but they contained the veteran
strength of the Mæsian and Pannonian bands. The obstinacy with which they disputed the vain
honors of rank and precedency, was the cause of their destruction; and while they acted with
separate forces and divided councils, they were surprised and slaughtered by the active vigor of
the Sarmatian horse. The success of this invasion provoked the emulation of the bordering
tribes; and the province of Mæsia would infallibly have been lost, if young Theodosius, the
duke, or military commander, of the frontier, had not signalized, in the defeat of the public
enemy, an intrepid genius, worthy of his illustrious father, and of his future greatness.
Chapter XXV: Reigns Of Jovian And Valentinian, Division Of The Empire. -- Part VII.
The mind of Valentinian, who then resided at Treves, was deeply affected by the calamities of
Illyricum; but the lateness of the season suspended the execution of his designs till the ensuing
spring. He marched in person, with a considerable part of the forces of Gaul, from the banks of
the Moselle: and to the suppliant ambassadors of the Sarmatians, who met him on the way, he
returned a doubtful answer, that, as soon as he reached the scene of action, he should examine,
and pronounce. When he arrived at Sirmium, he gave audience to the deputies of the Illyrian
provinces; who loudly congratulated their own felicity under the auspicious government of
Probus, his Prætorian præfect. Valentinian, who was flattered by these demonstrations of their
loyalty and gratitude, imprudently asked the deputy of Epirus, a Cynic philosopher of intrepid
sincerity, whether he was freely sent by the wishes of the province. "With tears and groans am I
sent," replied Iphicles, "by a reluctant people." The emperor paused: but the impunity of his
ministers established the pernicious maxim, that they might oppress his subjects, without
injuring his service. A strict inquiry into their conduct would have relieved the public discontent.
The severe condemnation of the murder of Gabinius, was the only measure which could restore
the confidence of the Germans, and vindicate the honor of the Roman name. But the haughty
monarch was incapable of the magnanimity which dares to acknowledge a fault. He forgot the
provocation, remembered only the injury, and advanced into the country of the Quadi with an
insatiate thirst of blood and revenge. The extreme devastation, and promiscuous massacre, of a
savage war, were justified, in the eyes of the emperor, and perhaps in those of the world, by the
cruel equity of retaliation: and such was the discipline of the Romans, and the consternation of
the enemy, that Valentinian repassed the Danube without the loss of a single man. As he had
resolved to complete the destruction of the Quadi by a second campaign, he fixed his winter
quarters at Bregetio, on the Danube, near the Hungarian city of Presburg. While the operations
of war were suspended by the severity of the weather, the Quadi made an humble attempt to
deprecate the wrath of their conqueror; and, at the earnest persuasion of Equitius, their
ambassadors were introduced into the Imperial council. They approached the throne with bended
bodies and dejected countenances; and without daring to complain of the murder of their king,
they affirmed, with solemn oaths, that the late invasion was the crime of some irregular robbers,
which the public council of the nation condemned and abhorred. The answer of the emperor left
them but little to hope from his clemency or compassion. He reviled, in the most intemperate
language, their baseness, their ingratitude, their insolence. His eyes, his voice, his color, his
gestures, expressed the violence of his ungoverned fury; and while his whole frame was agitated
with convulsive passion, a large blood vessel suddenly burst in his body; and Valentinian fell
speechless into the arms of his attendants. Their pious care immediately concealed his situation
from the crowd; but, in a few minutes, the emperor of the West expired in an agony of pain,
retaining his senses till the last; and struggling, without success, to declare his intentions to the
generals and ministers, who surrounded the royal couch. Valentinian was about fifty-four years
of age; and he wanted only one hundred days to accomplish the twelve years of his reign.
The polygamy of Valentinian is seriously attested by an ecclesiastical historian. "The empress
Severa (I relate the fable) admitted into her familiar society the lovely Justina, the daughter of an
Italian governor: her admiration of those naked charms, which she had often seen in the bath,
was expressed with such lavish and imprudent praise, that the emperor was tempted to introduce
a second wife into his bed; and his public edict extended to all the subjects of the empire the
same domestic privilege which he had assumed for himself." But we may be assured, from the
evidence of reason as well as history, that the two marriages of Valentinian, with Severa, and
with Justina, were successively contracted; and that he used the ancient permission of divorce,
which was still allowed by the laws, though it was condemned by the church Severa was the
mother of Gratian, who seemed to unite every claim which could entitle him to the undoubted
succession of the Western empire. He was the eldest son of a monarch whose glorious reign had
confirmed the free and honorable choice of his fellow-soldiers. Before he had attained the ninth
year of his age, the royal youth received from the hands of his indulgent father the purple robe
and diadem, with the title of Augustus; the election was solemnly ratified by the consent and
applause of the armies of Gaul; and the name of Gratian was added to the names of Valentinian
and Valens, in all the legal transactions of the Roman government. By his marriage with the
granddaughter of Constantine, the son of Valentinian acquired all the hereditary rights of the
Flavian family; which, in a series of three Imperial generations, were sanctified by time, religion,
and the reverence of the people. At the death of his father, the royal youth was in the seventeenth
year of his age; and his virtues already justified the favorable opinion of the army and the
people. But Gratian resided, without apprehension, in the palace of Treves; whilst, at the
distance of many hundred miles, Valentinian suddenly expired in the camp of Bregetio. The
passions, which had been so long suppressed by the presence of a master, immediately revived in
the Imperial council; and the ambitious design of reigning in the name of an infant, was artfully
executed by Mellobaudes and Equitius, who commanded the attachment of the Illyrian and
Italian bands. They contrived the most honorable pretences to remove the popular leaders, and
the troops of Gaul, who might have asserted the claims of the lawful successor; they suggested
the necessity of extinguishing the hopes of foreign and domestic enemies, by a bold and decisive
measure. The empress Justina, who had been left in a palace about one hundred miles from
Bregetio, was respectively invited to appear in the camp, with the son of the deceased emperor.
On the sixth day after the death of Valentinian, the infant prince of the same name, who was
only four years old, was shown, in the arms of his mother, to the legions; and solemnly invested,
by military acclamation, with the titles and ensigns of supreme power. The impending dangers of
a civil war were seasonably prevented by the wise and moderate conduct of the emperor Gratian.
He cheerfully accepted the choice of the army; declared that he should always consider the son
of Justina as a brother, not as a rival; and advised the empress, with her son Valentinian to fix
their residence at Milan, in the fair and peaceful province of Italy; while he assumed the more
arduous command of the countries beyond the Alps. Gratian dissembled his resentment till he
could safely punish, or disgrace, the authors of the conspiracy; and though he uniformly behaved
with tenderness and regard to his infant colleague, he gradually confounded, in the
administration of the Western empire, the office of a guardian with the authority of a sovereign.
The government of the Roman world was exercised in the united names of Valens and his two
nephews; but the feeble emperor of the East, who succeeded to the rank of his elder brother,
never obtained any weight or influence in the councils of the West.
Chapter XXVI: Progress of The Huns.
Part I.
Manners Of The Pastoral Nations. -- Progress Of The Huns, From China To Europe. -- Flight Of
The Goths. -- They Pass The Danube. -- Gothic War. -- Defeat And Death Of Valens. -- Gratian
Invests Theodosius With The Eastern Empire. -- His Character And Success. -- Peace And
Settlement Of The Goths.
In the second year of the reign of Valentinian and Valens, on the morning of the twenty-first day
of July, the greatest part of the Roman world was shaken by a violent and destructive
earthquake. The impression was communicated to the waters; the shores of the Mediterranean
were left dry, by the sudden retreat of the sea; great quantities of fish were caught with the hand;
large vessels were stranded on the mud; and a curious spectator amused his eye, or rather his
fancy, by contemplating the various appearance of valleys and mountains, which had never,
since the formation of the globe, been exposed to the sun. But the tide soon returned, with the
weight of an immense and irresistible deluge, which was severely felt on the coasts of Sicily, of
Dalmatia, of Greece, and of Egypt: large boats were transported, and lodged on the roofs of
houses, or at the distance of two miles from the shore; the people, with their habitations, were
swept away by the waters; and the city of Alexandria annually commemorated the fatal day, on
which fifty thousand persons had lost their lives in the inundation. This calamity, the report of
which was magnified from one province to another, astonished and terrified the subjects of
Rome; and their affrighted imagination enlarged the real extent of a momentary evil. They
recollected the preceding earthquakes, which had subverted the cities of Palestine and Bithynia:
they considered these alarming strokes as the prelude only of still more dreadful calamities, and
their fearful vanity was disposed to confound the symptoms of a declining empire and a sinking
world. It was the fashion of the times to attribute every remarkable event to the particular will
of the Deity; the alterations of nature were connected, by an invisible chain, with the moral and
metaphysical opinions of the human mind; and the most sagacious divines could distinguish,
according to the color of their respective prejudices, that the establishment of heresy tended to
produce an earthquake; or that a deluge was the inevitable consequence of the progress of sin
and error. Without presuming to discuss the truth or propriety of these lofty speculations, the
historian may content himself with an observation, which seems to be justified by experience,
that man has much more to fear from the passions of his fellow-creatures, than from the
convulsions of the elements. The mischievous effects of an earthquake, or deluge, a hurricane,
or the eruption of a volcano, bear a very inconsiderable portion to the ordinary calamities of war,
as they are now moderated by the prudence or humanity of the princes of Europe, who amuse
their own leisure, and exercise the courage of their subjects, in the practice of the military art.
But the laws and manners of modern nations protect the safety and freedom of the vanquished
soldier; and the peaceful citizen has seldom reason to complain, that his life, or even his fortune,
is exposed to the rage of war. In the disastrous period of the fall of the Roman empire, which
may justly be dated from the reign of Valens, the happiness and security of each individual were
personally attacked; and the arts and labors of ages were rudely defaced by the Barbarians of
Scythia and Germany. The invasion of the Huns precipitated on the provinces of the West the
Gothic nation, which advanced, in less than forty years, from the Danube to the Atlantic, and
opened a way, by the success of their arms, to the inroads of so many hostile tribes, more savage
than themselves. The original principle of motion was concealed in the remote countries of the
North; and the curious observation of the pastoral life of the Scythians, or Tartars, will
illustrate the latent cause of these destructive emigrations.
The different characters that mark the civilized nations of the globe, may be ascribed to the use,
and the abuse, of reason; which so variously shapes, and so artificially composes, the manners
and opinions of a European, or a Chinese. But the operation of instinct is more sure and simple
than that of reason: it is much easier to ascertain the appetites of a quadruped than the
speculations of a philosopher; and the savage tribes of mankind, as they approach nearer to the
condition of animals, preserve a stronger resemblance to themselves and to each other. The
uniform stability of their manners is the natural consequence of the imperfection of their
faculties. Reduced to a similar situation, their wants, their desires, their enjoyments, still
continue the same: and the influence of food or climate, which, in a more improved state of
society, is suspended, or subdued, by so many moral causes, most powerfully contributes to
form, and to maintain, the national character of Barbarians. In every age, the immense plains of
Scythia, or Tartary, have been inhabited by vagrant tribes of hunters and shepherds, whose
indolence refuses to cultivate the earth, and whose restless spirit disdains the confinement of a
sedentary life. In every age, the Scythians, and Tartars, have been renowned for their invincible
courage and rapid conquests. The thrones of Asia have been repeatedly overturned by the
shepherds of the North; and their arms have spread terror and devastation over the most fertile
and warlike countries of Europe. On this occasion, as well as on many others, the sober
historian is forcibly awakened from a pleasing vision; and is compelled, with some reluctance,
to confess, that the pastoral manners, which have been adorned with the fairest attributes of
peace and innocence, are much better adapted to the fierce and cruel habits of a military life. To
illustrate this observation, I shall now proceed to consider a nation of shepherds and of warriors,
in the three important articles of, I. Their diet; II. Their habitations; and, III. Their exercises. The
narratives of antiquity are justified by the experience of modern times; and the banks of the
Borysthenes, of the Volga, or of the Selinga, will indifferently present the same uniform
spectacle of similar and native manners.
I. The corn, or even the rice, which constitutes the ordinary and wholesome food of a civilized
people, can be obtained only by the patient toil of the husbandman. Some of the happy savages,
who dwell between the tropics, are plentifully nourished by the liberality of nature; but in the
climates of the North, a nation of shepherds is reduced to their flocks and herds. The skilful
practitioners of the medical art will determine (if they are able to determine) how far the temper
of the human mind may be affected by the use of animal, or of vegetable, food; and whether the
common association of carnivorous and cruel deserves to be considered in any other light than
that of an innocent, perhaps a salutary, prejudice of humanity. Yet, if it be true, that the
sentiment of compassion is imperceptibly weakened by the sight and practice of domestic
cruelty, we may observe, that the horrid objects which are disguised by the arts of European
refinement, are exhibited in their naked and most disgusting simplicity in the tent of a Tartarian
shepherd. The ox, or the sheep, are slaughtered by the same hand from which they were
accustomed to receive their daily food; and the bleeding limbs are served, with very little
preparation, on the table of their unfeeling murderer. In the military profession, and especially in
the conduct of a numerous army, the exclusive use of animal food appears to be productive of
the most solid advantages. Corn is a bulky and perishable commodity; and the large magazines,
which are indispensably necessary for the subsistence of our troops, must be slowly transported
by the labor of men or horses. But the flocks and herds, which accompany the march of the
Tartars, afford a sure and increasing supply of flesh and milk: in the far greater part of the
uncultivated waste, the vegetation of the grass is quick and luxuriant; and there are few places so
extremely barren, that the hardy cattle of the North cannot find some tolerable pasture. The
supply is multiplied and prolonged by the undistinguishing appetite, and patient abstinence, of
the Tartars. They indifferently feed on the flesh of those animals that have been killed for the
table, or have died of disease. Horseflesh, which in every age and country has been proscribed by
the civilized nations of Europe and Asia, they devour with peculiar greediness; and this singular
taste facilitates the success of their military operations. The active cavalry of Scythia is always
followed, in their most distant and rapid incursions, by an adequate number of spare horses, who
may be occasionally used, either to redouble the speed, or to satisfy the hunger, of the
Barbarians. Many are the resources of courage and poverty. When the forage round a camp of
Tartars is almost consumed, they slaughter the greatest part of their cattle, and preserve the
flesh, either smoked, or dried in the sun. On the sudden emergency of a hasty march, they
provide themselves with a sufficient quantity of little balls of cheese, or rather of hard curd,
which they occasionally dissolve in water; and this unsubstantial diet will support, for many
days, the life, and even the spirits, of the patient warrior. But this extraordinary abstinence,
which the Stoic would approve, and the hermit might envy, is commonly succeeded by the most
voracious indulgence of appetite. The wines of a happier climate are the most grateful present,
or the most valuable commodity, that can be offered to the Tartars; and the only example of their
industry seems to consist in the art of extracting from mare's milk a fermented liquor, which
possesses a very strong power of intoxication. Like the animals of prey, the savages, both of the
old and new world, experience the alternate vicissitudes of famine and plenty; and their stomach
is inured to sustain, without much inconvenience, the opposite extremes of hunger and of
intemperance.
II. In the ages of rustic and martial simplicity, a people of soldiers and husbandmen are dispersed
over the face of an extensive and cultivated country; and some time must elapse before the
warlike youth of Greece or Italy could be assembled under the same standard, either to defend
their own confines, or to invade the territories of the adjacent tribes. The progress of
manufactures and commerce insensibly collects a large multitude within the walls of a city: but
these citizens are no longer soldiers; and the arts which adorn and improve the state of civil
society, corrupt the habits of the military life. The pastoral manners of the Scythians seem to
unite the different advantages of simplicity and refinement. The individuals of the same tribe are
constantly assembled, but they are assembled in a camp; and the native spirit of these dauntless
shepherds is animated by mutual support and emulation. The houses of the Tartars are no more
than small tents, of an oval form, which afford a cold and dirty habitation, for the promiscuous
youth of both sexes. The palaces of the rich consist of wooden huts, of such a size that they may
be conveniently fixed on large wagons, and drawn by a team perhaps of twenty or thirty oxen.
The flocks and herds, after grazing all day in the adjacent pastures, retire, on the approach of
night, within the protection of the camp. The necessity of preventing the most mischievous
confusion, in such a perpetual concourse of men and animals, must gradually introduce, in the
distribution, the order, and the guard, of the encampment, the rudiments of the military art. As
soon as the forage of a certain district is consumed, the tribe, or rather army, of shepherds,
makes a regular march to some fresh pastures; and thus acquires, in the ordinary occupations of
the pastoral life, the practical knowledge of one of the most important and difficult operations of
war. The choice of stations is regulated by the difference of the seasons: in the summer, the
Tartars advance towards the North, and pitch their tents on the banks of a river, or, at least, in
the neighborhood of a running stream. But in the winter, they return to the South, and shelter
their camp, behind some convenient eminence, against the winds, which are chilled in their
passage over the bleak and icy regions of Siberia. These manners are admirably adapted to
diffuse, among the wandering tribes, the spirit of emigration and conquest. The connection
between the people and their territory is of so frail a texture, that it may be broken by the
slightest accident. The camp, and not the soil, is the native country of the genuine Tartar. Within
the precincts of that camp, his family, his companions, his property, are always included; and, in
the most distant marches, he is still surrounded by the objects which are dear, or valuable, or
familiar in his eyes. The thirst of rapine, the fear, or the resentment of injury, the impatience of
servitude, have, in every age, been sufficient causes to urge the tribes of Scythia boldly to
advance into some unknown countries, where they might hope to find a more plentiful
subsistence or a less formidable enemy. The revolutions of the North have frequently determined
the fate of the South; and in the conflict of hostile nations, the victor and the vanquished have
alternately drove, and been driven, from the confines of China to those of Germany. These great
emigrations, which have been sometimes executed with almost incredible diligence, were
rendered more easy by the peculiar nature of the climate. It is well known that the cold of
Tartary is much more severe than in the midst of the temperate zone might reasonably be
expected; this uncommon rigor is attributed to the height of the plains, which rise, especially
towards the East, more than half a mile above the level of the sea; and to the quantity of saltpetre
with which the soil is deeply impregnated. In the winter season, the broad and rapid rivers, that
discharge their waters into the Euxine, the Caspian, or the Icy Sea, are strongly frozen; the fields
are covered with a bed of snow; and the fugitive, or victorious, tribes may securely traverse, with
their families, their wagons, and their cattle, the smooth and hard surface of an immense plain.
III. The pastoral life, compared with the labors of agriculture and manufactures, is undoubtedly a
life of idleness; and as the most honorable shepherds of the Tartar race devolve on their captives
the domestic management of the cattle, their own leisure is seldom disturbed by any servile and
assiduous cares. But this leisure, instead of being devoted to the soft enjoyments of love and
harmony, is use fully spent in the violent and sanguinary exercise of the chase. The plains of
Tartary are filled with a strong and serviceable breed of horses, which are easily trained for the
purposes of war and hunting. The Scythians of every age have been celebrated as bold and
skilful riders; and constant practice had seated them so firmly on horseback, that they were
supposed by strangers to perform the ordinary duties of civil life, to eat, to drink, and even to
sleep, without dismounting from their steeds. They excel in the dexterous management of the
lance; the long Tartar bow is drawn with a nervous arm; and the weighty arrow is directed to its
object with unerring aim and irresistible force. These arrows are often pointed against the
harmless animals of the desert, which increase and multiply in the absence of their most
formidable enemy; the hare, the goat, the roebuck, the fallow-deer, the stag, the elk, and the
antelope. The vigor and patience, both of the men and horses, are continually exercised by the
fatigues of the chase; and the plentiful supply of game contributes to the subsistence, and even
luxury, of a Tartar camp. But the exploits of the hunters of Scythia are not confined to the
destruction of timid or innoxious beasts; they boldly encounter the angry wild boar, when he
turns against his pursuers, excite the sluggish courage of the bear, and provoke the fury of the
tiger, as he slumbers in the thicket. Where there is danger, there may be glory; and the mode of
hunting, which opens the fairest field to the exertions of valor, may justly be considered as the
image, and as the school, of war. The general hunting matches, the pride and delight of the
Tartar princes, compose an instructive exercise for their numerous cavalry. A circle is drawn, of
many miles in circumference, to encompass the game of an extensive district; and the troops that
form the circle regularly advance towards a common centre; where the captive animals,
surrounded on every side, are abandoned to the darts of the hunters. In this march, which
frequently continues many days, the cavalry are obliged to climb the hills, to swim the rivers,
and to wind through the valleys, without interrupting the prescribed order of their gradual
progress. They acquire the habit of directing their eye, and their steps, to a remote object; of
preserving their intervals of suspending or accelerating their pace, according to the motions of
the troops on their right and left; and of watching and repeating the signals of their leaders. Their
leaders study, in this practical school, the most important lesson of the military art; the prompt
and accurate judgment of ground, of distance, and of time. To employ against a human enemy
the same patience and valor, the same skill and discipline, is the only alteration which is
required in real war; and the amusements of the chase serve as a prelude to the conquest of an
empire.
The political society of the ancient Germans has the appearance of a voluntary alliance of
independent warriors. The tribes of Scythia, distinguished by the modern appellation of Hords,
assume the form of a numerous and increasing family; which, in the course of successive
generations, has been propagated from the same original stock. The meanest, and most ignorant,
of the Tartars, preserve, with conscious pride, the inestimable treasure of their genealogy; and
whatever distinctions of rank may have been introduced, by the unequal distribution of pastoral
wealth, they mutually respect themselves, and each other, as the descendants of the first founder
of the tribe. The custom, which still prevails, of adopting the bravest and most faithful of the
captives, may countenance the very probable suspicion, that this extensive consanguinity is, in a
great measure, legal and fictitious. But the useful prejudice, which has obtained the sanction of
time and opinion, produces the effects of truth; the haughty Barbarians yield a cheerful and
voluntary obedience to the head of their blood; and their chief, or mursa, as the representative of
their great father, exercises the authority of a judge in peace, and of a leader in war. In the
original state of the pastoral world, each of the mursas (if we may continue to use a modern
appellation) acted as the independent chief of a large and separate family; and the limits of their
peculiar territories were gradually fixed by superior force, or mutual consent. But the constant
operation of various and permanent causes contributed to unite the vagrant Hords into national
communities, under the command of a supreme head. The weak were desirous of support, and
the strong were ambitious of dominion; the power, which is the result of union, oppressed and
collected the divided force of the adjacent tribes; and, as the vanquished were freely admitted to
share the advantages of victory, the most valiant chiefs hastened to range themselves and their
followers under the formidable standard of a confederate nation. The most successful of the
Tartar princes assumed the military command, to which he was entitled by the superiority, either
of merit or of power. He was raised to the throne by the acclamations of his equals; and the title
of Khan expresses, in the language of the North of Asia, the full extent of the regal dignity. The
right of hereditary succession was long confined to the blood of the founder of the monarchy;
and at this moment all the Khans, who reign from Crimea to the wall of China, are the lineal
descendants of the renowned Zingis. But, as it is the indispensable duty of a Tartar sovereign to
lead his warlike subjects into the field, the claims of an infant are often disregarded; and some
royal kinsman, distinguished by his age and valor, is intrusted with the sword and sceptre of his
predecessor. Two distinct and regular taxes are levied on the tribes, to support the dignity of the
national monarch, and of their peculiar chief; and each of those contributions amounts to the
tithe, both of their property, and of their spoil. A Tartar sovereign enjoys the tenth part of the
wealth of his people; and as his own domestic riches of flocks and herds increase in a much
larger proportion, he is able plentifully to maintain the rustic splendor of his court, to reward the
most deserving, or the most favored of his followers, and to obtain, from the gentle influence of
corruption, the obedience which might be sometimes refused to the stern mandates of authority.
The manners of his subjects, accustomed, like himself, to blood and rapine, might excuse, in
their eyes, such partial acts of tyranny, as would excite the horror of a civilized people; but the
power of a despot has never been acknowledged in the deserts of Scythia. The immediate
jurisdiction of the khan is confined within the limits of his own tribe; and the exercise of his
royal prerogative has been moderated by the ancient institution of a national council. The
Coroultai, or Diet, of the Tartars, was regularly held in the spring and autumn, in the midst of a
plain; where the princes of the reigning family, and the mursas of the respective tribes, may
conveniently assemble on horseback, with their martial and numerous trains; and the ambitious
monarch, who reviewed the strength, must consult the inclination of an armed people. The
rudiments of a feudal government may be discovered in the constitution of the Scythian or Tartar
nations; but the perpetual conflict of those hostile nations has sometimes terminated in the
establishment of a powerful and despotic empire. The victor, enriched by the tribute, and
fortified by the arms of dependent kings, has spread his conquests over Europe or Asia: the
successful shepherds of the North have submitted to the confinement of arts, of laws, and of
cities; and the introduction of luxury, after destroying the freedom of the people, has undermined
the foundations of the throne.
The memory of past events cannot long be preserved in the frequent and remote emigrations of
illiterate Barbarians. The modern Tartars are ignorant of the conquests of their ancestors; and
our knowledge of the history of the Scythians is derived from their intercourse with the learned
and civilized nations of the South, the Greeks, the Persians, and the Chinese. The Greeks, who
navigated the Euxine, and planted their colonies along the sea-coast, made the gradual and
imperfect discovery of Scythia; from the Danube, and the confines of Thrace, as far as the frozen
Mæotis, the seat of eternal winter, and Mount Caucasus, which, in the language of poetry, was
described as the utmost boundary of the earth. They celebrated, with simple credulity, the virtues
of the pastoral life: they entertained a more rational apprehension of the strength and numbers
of the warlike Barbarians, who contemptuously baffled the immense armament of Darius, the
son of Hystaspes. The Persian monarchs had extended their western conquests to the banks of
the Danube, and the limits of European Scythia. The eastern provinces of their empire were
exposed to the Scythians of Asia; the wild inhabitants of the plains beyond the Oxus and the
Jaxartes, two mighty rivers, which direct their course towards the Caspian Sea. The long and
memorable quarrel of Iran and Touran is still the theme of history or romance: the famous,
perhaps the fabulous, valor of the Persian heroes, Rustan and Asfendiar, was signalized, in the
defence of their country, against the Afrasiabs of the North; and the invincible spirit of the same
Barbarians resisted, on the same ground, the victorious arms of Cyrus and Alexander. In the
eyes of the Greeks and Persians, the real geography of Scythia was bounded, on the East, by the
mountains of Imaus, or Caf; and their distant prospect of the extreme and inaccessible parts of
Asia was clouded by ignorance, or perplexed by fiction. But those inaccessible regions are the
ancient residence of a powerful and civilized nation, which ascends, by a probable tradition,
above forty centuries; and which is able to verify a series of near two thousand years, by the
perpetual testimony of accurate and contemporary historians. The annals of China illustrate the
state and revolutions of the pastoral tribes, which may still be distinguished by the vague
appellation of Scythians, or Tartars; the vassals, the enemies, and sometimes the conquerors, of
a great empire; whose policy has uniformly opposed the blind and impetuous valor of the
Barbarians of the North. From the mouth of the Danube to the Sea of Japan, the whole longitude
of Scythia is about one hundred and ten degrees, which, in that parallel, are equal to more than
five thousand miles. The latitude of these extensive deserts cannot be so easily, or so accurately,
measured; but, from the fortieth degree, which touches the wall of China, we may securely
advance above a thousand miles to the northward, till our progress is stopped by the excessive
cold of Siberia. In that dreary climate, instead of the animated picture of a Tartar camp, the
smoke that issues from the earth, or rather from the snow, betrays the subterraneous dwellings of
the Tongouses, and the Samoides: the want of horses and oxen is imperfectly supplied by the use
of reindeer, and of large dogs; and the conquerors of the earth insensibly degenerate into a race
of deformed and diminutive savages, who tremble at the sound of arms.
Chapter XXVI: Progress of The Huns. -- Part II.
The Huns, who under the reign of Valens threatened the empire of Rome, had been formidable,
in a much earlier period, to the empire of China. Their ancient, perhaps their original, seat was
an extensive, though dry and barren, tract of country, immediately on the north side of the great
wall. Their place is at present occupied by the forty-nine Hords or Banners of the Mongous, a
pastoral nation, which consists of about two hundred thousand families. But the valor of the
Huns had extended the narrow limits of their dominions; and their rustic chiefs, who assumed
the appellation of Tanjou, gradually became the conquerors, and the sovereigns of a formidable
empire. Towards the East, their victorious arms were stopped only by the ocean; and the tribes,
which are thinly scattered between the Amoor and the extreme peninsula of Corea, adhered, with
reluctance, to the standard of the Huns. On the West, near the head of the Irtish, in the valleys of
Imaus, they found a more ample space, and more numerous enemies. One of the lieutenants of
the Tanjou subdued, in a single expedition, twenty-six nations; the Igours, distinguished above
the Tartar race by the use of letters, were in the number of his vassals; and, by the strange
connection of human events, the flight of one of those vagrant tribes recalled the victorious
Parthians from the invasion of Syria. On the side of the North, the ocean was assigned as the
limit of the power of the Huns. Without enemies to resist their progress, or witnesses to
contradict their vanity, they might securely achieve a real, or imaginary, conquest of the frozen
regions of Siberia. The Northern Sea was fixed as the remote boundary of their empire. But the
name of that sea, on whose shores the patriot Sovou embraced the life of a shepherd and an
exile, may be transferred, with much more probability, to the Baikal, a capacious basin, above
three hundred miles in length, which disdains the modest appellation of a lake and which
actually communicates with the seas of the North, by the long course of the Angara, the
Tongusha, and the Jenissea. The submission of so many distant nations might flatter the pride of
the Tanjou; but the valor of the Huns could be rewarded only by the enjoyment of the wealth and
luxury of the empire of the South. In the third century before the Christian æra, a wall of fifteen
hundred miles in length was constructed, to defend the frontiers of China against the inroads of
the Huns; but this stupendous work, which holds a conspicuous place in the map of the world,
has never contributed to the safety of an unwarlike people. The cavalry of the Tanjou frequently
consisted of two or three hundred thousand men, formidable by the matchless dexterity with
which they managed their bows and their horses: by their hardy patience in supporting the
inclemency of the weather; and by the incredible speed of their march, which was seldom
checked by torrents, or precipices, by the deepest rivers, or by the most lofty mountains. They
spread themselves at once over the face of the country; and their rapid impetuosity surprised,
astonished, and disconcerted the grave and elaborate tactics of a Chinese army. The emperor
Kaoti, a soldier of fortune, whose personal merit had raised him to the throne, marched against
the Huns with those veteran troops which had been trained in the civil wars of China. But he was
soon surrounded by the Barbarians; and, after a siege of seven days, the monarch, hopeless of
relief, was reduced to purchase his deliverance by an ignominious capitulation. The successors
of Kaoti, whose lives were dedicated to the arts of peace, or the luxury of the palace, submitted
to a more permanent disgrace. They too hastily confessed the insufficiency of arms and
fortifications. They were too easily convinced, that while the blazing signals announced on every
side the approach of the Huns, the Chinese troops, who slept with the helmet on their head, and
the cuirass on their back, were destroyed by the incessant labor of ineffectual marches. A
regular payment of money, and silk, was stipulated as the condition of a temporary and
precarious peace; and the wretched expedient of disguising a real tribute, under the names of a
gift or subsidy, was practised by the emperors of China as well as by those of Rome. But there
still remained a more disgraceful article of tribute, which violated the sacred feelings of
humanity and nature. The hardships of the savage life, which destroy in their infancy the
children who are born with a less healthy and robust constitution, introduced a remarkable
disproportion between the numbers of the two sexes. The Tartars are an ugly and even deformed
race; and while they consider their own women as the instruments of domestic labor, their
desires, or rather their appetites, are directed to the enjoyment of more elegant beauty. A select
band of the fairest maidens of China was annually devoted to the rude embraces of the Huns;
and the alliance of the haughty Tanjous was secured by their marriage with the genuine, or
adopted, daughters of the Imperial family, which vainly attempted to escape the sacrilegious
pollution. The situation of these unhappy victims is described in the verses of a Chinese
princess, who laments that she had been condemned by her parents to a distant exile, under a
Barbarian husband; who complains that sour milk was her only drink, raw flesh her only food, a
tent her only palace; and who expresses, in a strain of pathetic simplicity, the natural wish, that
she were transformed into a bird, to fly back to her dear country; the object of her tender and
perpetual regret.
The conquest of China has been twice achieved by the pastoral tribes of the North: the forces of
the Huns were not inferior to those of the Moguls, or of the Mantcheoux; and their ambition
might entertain the most sanguine hopes of success. But their pride was humbled, and their
progress was checked, by the arms and policy of Vouti, the fifth emperor of the powerful
dynasty of the Han. In his long reign of fifty-four years, the Barbarians of the southern provinces
submitted to the laws and manners of China; and the ancient limits of the monarchy were
enlarged, from the great river of Kiang, to the port of Canton. Instead of confining himself to the
timid operations of a defensive war, his lieutenants penetrated many hundred miles into the
country of the Huns. In those boundless deserts, where it is impossible to form magazines, and
difficult to transport a sufficient supply of provisions, the armies of Vouti were repeatedly
exposed to intolerable hardships: and, of one hundred and forty thousand soldiers, who marched
against the Barbarians, thirty thousand only returned in safety to the feet of their master. These
losses, however, were compensated by splendid and decisive success. The Chinese generals
improved the superiority which they derived from the temper of their arms, their chariots of war,
and the service of their Tartar auxiliaries. The camp of the Tanjou was surprised in the midst of
sleep and intemperance; and, though the monarch of the Huns bravely cut his way through the
ranks of the enemy, he left above fifteen thousand of his subjects on the field of battle. Yet this
signal victory, which was preceded and followed by many bloody engagements, contributed
much less to the destruction of the power of the Huns than the effectual policy which was
employed to detach the tributary nations from their obedience. Intimidated by the arms, or
allured by the promises, of Vouti and his successors, the most considerable tribes, both of the
East and of the West, disclaimed the authority of the Tanjou. While some acknowledged
themselves the allies or vassals of the empire, they all became the implacable enemies of the
Huns; and the numbers of that haughty people, as soon as they were reduced to their native
strength, might, perhaps, have been contained within the walls of one of the great and populous
cities of China. The desertion of his subjects, and the perplexity of a civil war, at length
compelled the Tanjou himself to renounce the dignity of an independent sovereign, and the
freedom of a warlike and high-spirited nation. He was received at Sigan, the capital of the
monarchy, by the troops, the mandarins, and the emperor himself, with all the honors that could
adorn and disguise the triumph of Chinese vanity. A magnificent palace was prepared for his
reception; his place was assigned above all the princes of the royal family; and the patience of
the Barbarian king was exhausted by the ceremonies of a banquet, which consisted of eight
courses of meat, and of nine solemn pieces of music. But he performed, on his knees, the duty of
a respectful homage to the emperor of China; pronounced, in his own name, and in the name of
his successors, a perpetual oath of fidelity; and gratefully accepted a seal, which was bestowed
as the emblem of his regal dependence. After this humiliating submission, the Tanjous
sometimes departed from their allegiance and seized the favorable moments of war and rapine;
but the monarchy of the Huns gradually declined, till it was broken, by civil dissension, into two
hostile and separate kingdoms. One of the princes of the nation was urged, by fear and ambition,
to retire towards the South with eight hords, which composed between forty and fifty thousand
families. He obtained, with the title of Tanjou, a convenient territory on the verge of the Chinese
provinces; and his constant attachment to the service of the empire was secured by weakness,
and the desire of revenge. From the time of this fatal schism, the Huns of the North continued to
languish about fifty years; till they were oppressed on every side by their foreign and domestic
enemies. The proud inscription of a column, erected on a lofty mountain, announced to
posterity, that a Chinese army had marched seven hundred miles into the heart of their country.
The Sienpi, a tribe of Oriental Tartars, retaliated the injuries which they had formerly sustained;
and the power of the Tanjous, after a reign of thirteen hundred years, was utterly destroyed
before the end of the first century of the Christian æra.
The fate of the vanquished Huns was diversified by the various influence of character and
situation. Above one hundred thousand persons, the poorest, indeed, and the most pusillanimous
of the people, were contented to remain in their native country, to renounce their peculiar name
and origin, and to mingle with the victorious nation of the Sienpi. Fifty-eight hords, about two
hundred thousand men, ambitious of a more honorable servitude, retired towards the South;
implored the protection of the emperors of China; and were permitted to inhabit, and to guard,
the extreme frontiers of the province of Chansi and the territory of Ortous. But the most warlike
and powerful tribes of the Huns maintained, in their adverse fortune, the undaunted spirit of their
ancestors. The Western world was open to their valor; and they resolved, under the conduct of
their hereditary chieftains, to conquer and subdue some remote country, which was still
inaccessible to the arms of the Sienpi, and to the laws of China. The course of their emigration
soon carried them beyond the mountains of Imaus, and the limits of the Chinese geography; but
we are able to distinguish the two great divisions of these formidable exiles, which directed their
march towards the Oxus, and towards the Volga. The first of these colonies established their
dominion in the fruitful and extensive plains of Sogdiana, on the eastern side of the Caspian;
where they preserved the name of Huns, with the epithet of Euthalites, or Nepthalites. * Their
manners were softened, and even their features were insensibly improved, by the mildness of the
climate, and their long residence in a flourishing province, which might still retain a faint
impression of the arts of Greece. The whiteHuns, a name which they derived from the change of
their complexions, soon abandoned the pastoral life of Scythia. Gorgo, which, under the
appellation of Carizme, has since enjoyed a temporary splendor, was the residence of the king,
who exercised a legal authority over an obedient people. Their luxury was maintained by the
labor of the Sogdians; and the only vestige of their ancient barbarism, was the custom which
obliged all the companions, perhaps to the number of twenty, who had shared the liberality of a
wealthy lord, to be buried alive in the same grave. The vicinity of the Huns to the provinces of
Persia, involved them in frequent and bloody contests with the power of that monarchy. But they
respected, in peace, the faith of treaties; in war, she dictates of humanity; and their memorable
victory over Peroses, or Firuz, displayed the moderation, as well as the valor, of the Barbarians.
The second division of their countrymen, the Huns, who gradually advanced towards the
North-west, were exercised by the hardships of a colder climate, and a more laborious march.
Necessity compelled them to exchange the silks of China for the furs of Siberia; the imperfect
rudiments of civilized life were obliterated; and the native fierceness of the Huns was
exasperated by their intercourse with the savage tribes, who were compared, with some
propriety, to the wild beasts of the desert. Their independent spirit soon rejected the hereditary
succession of the Tanjous; and while each horde was governed by its peculiar mursa, their
tumultuary council directed the public measures of the whole nation. As late as the thirteenth
century, their transient residence on the eastern banks of the Volga was attested by the name of
Great Hungary. In the winter, they descended with their flocks and herds towards the mouth of
that mighty river; and their summer excursions reached as high as the latitude of Saratoff, or
perhaps the conflux of the Kama. Such at least were the recent limits of the black Calmucks,
who remained about a century under the protection of Russia; and who have since returned to
their native seats on the frontiers of the Chinese empire. The march, and the return, of those
wandering Tartars, whose united camp consists of fifty thousand tents or families, illustrate the
distant emigrations of the ancient Huns.
It is impossible to fill the dark interval of time, which elapsed, after the Huns of the Volga were
lost in the eyes of the Chinese, and before they showed themselves to those of the Romans.
There is some reason, however, to apprehend, that the same force which had driven them from
their native seats, still continued to impel their march towards the frontiers of Europe. The
power of the Sienpi, their implacable enemies, which extended above three thousand miles from
East to West, must have gradually oppressed them by the weight and terror of a formidable
neighborhood; and the flight of the tribes of Scythia would inevitably tend to increase the
strength or to contract the territories, of the Huns. The harsh and obscure appellations of those
tribes would offend the ear, without informing the understanding, of the reader; but I cannot
suppress the very natural suspicion, that the Huns of the North derived a considerable
reenforcement from the ruin of the dynasty of the South, which, in the course of the third
century, submitted to the dominion of China; that the bravest warriors marched away in search
of their free and adventurous countrymen; and that, as they had been divided by prosperity, they
were easily reunited by the common hardships of their adverse fortune. The Huns, with their
flocks and herds, their wives and children, their dependents and allies, were transported to the
west of the Volga, and they boldly advanced to invade the country of the Alani, a pastoral
people, who occupied, or wasted, an extensive tract of the deserts of Scythia. The plains between
the Volga and the Tanais were covered with the tents of the Alani, but their name and manners
were diffused over the wide extent of their conquests; and the painted tribes of the Agathyrsi and
Geloni were confounded among their vassals. Towards the North, they penetrated into the frozen
regions of Siberia, among the savages who were accustomed, in their rage or hunger, to the taste
of human flesh; and their Southern inroads were pushed as far as the confines of Persia and
India. The mixture of Somatic and German blood had contributed to improve the features of the
Alani, * to whiten their swarthy complexions, and to tinge their hair with a yellowish cast, which
is seldom found in the Tartar race. They were less deformed in their persons, less brutish in their
manners, than the Huns; but they did not yield to those formidable Barbarians in their martial
and independent spirit; in the love of freedom, which rejected even the use of domestic slaves;
and in the love of arms, which considered war and rapine as the pleasure and the glory of
mankind. A naked cimeter, fixed in the ground, was the only object of their religious worship;
the scalps of their enemies formed the costly trappings of their horses; and they viewed, with
pity and contempt, the pusillanimous warriors, who patiently expected the infirmities of age, and
the tortures of lingering disease. On the banks of the Tanais, the military power of the Huns and
the Alani encountered each other with equal valor, but with unequal success. The Huns prevailed
in the bloody contest; the king of the Alani was slain; and the remains of the vanquished nation
were dispersed by the ordinary alternative of flight or submission. A colony of exiles found a
secure refuge in the mountains of Caucasus, between the Euxine and the Caspian, where they
still preserve their name and their independence. Another colony advanced, with more intrepid
courage, towards the shores of the Baltic; associated themselves with the Northern tribes of
Germany; and shared the spoil of the Roman provinces of Gaul and Spain. But the greatest part
of the nation of the Alani embraced the offers of an honorable and advantageous union; and the
Huns, who esteemed the valor of their less fortunate enemies, proceeded, with an increase of
numbers and confidence, to invade the limits of the Gothic empire.
The great Hermanric, whose dominions extended from the Baltic to the Euxine, enjoyed, in the
full maturity of age and reputation, the fruit of his victories, when he was alarmed by the
formidable approach of a host of unknown enemies, on whom his barbarous subjects might,
without injustice, bestow the epithet of Barbarians. The numbers, the strength, the rapid
motions, and the implacable cruelty of the Huns, were felt, and dreaded, and magnified, by the
astonished Goths; who beheld their fields and villages consumed with flames, and deluged with
indiscriminate slaughter. To these real terrors they added the surprise and abhorrence which
were excited by the shrill voice, the uncouth gestures, and the strange deformity of the Huns. *
These savages of Scythia were compared (and the picture had some resemblance) to the animals
who walk very awkwardly on two legs and to the misshapen figures, the Termini, which were
often placed on the bridges of antiquity. They were distinguished from the rest of the human
species by their broad shoulders, flat noses, and small black eyes, deeply buried in the head; and
as they were almost destitute of beards, they never enjoyed either the manly grace of youth, or
the venerable aspect of age. A fabulous origin was assigned, worthy of their form and manners;
that the witches of Scythia, who, for their foul and deadly practices, had been driven from
society, had copulated in the desert with infernal spirits; and that the Huns were the offspring of
this execrable conjunction. The tale, so full of horror and absurdity, was greedily embraced by
the credulous hatred of the Goths; but, while it gratified their hatred, it increased their fear, since
the posterity of dæmons and witches might be supposed to inherit some share of the
præternatural powers, as well as of the malignant temper, of their parents. Against these
enemies, Hermanric prepared to exert the united forces of the Gothic state; but he soon
discovered that his vassal tribes, provoked by oppression, were much more inclined to second,
than to repel, the invasion of the Huns. One of the chiefs of the Roxolani had formerly deserted
the standard of Hermanric, and the cruel tyrant had condemned the innocent wife of the traitor to
be torn asunder by wild horses. The brothers of that unfortunate woman seized the favorable
moment of revenge. The aged king of the Goths languished some time after the dangerous
wound which he received from their daggers; but the conduct of the war was retarded by his
infirmities; and the public councils of the nation were distracted by a spirit of jealousy and
discord. His death, which has been imputed to his own despair, left the reins of government in
the hands of Withimer, who, with the doubtful aid of some Scythian mercenaries, maintained the
unequal contest against the arms of the Huns and the Alani, till he was defeated and slain in a
decisive battle. The Ostrogoths submitted to their fate; and the royal race of the Amali will
hereafter be found among the subjects of the haughty Attila. But the person of Witheric, the
infant king, was saved by the diligence of Alatheus and Saphrax; two warriors of approved valor
and fidelity, who, by cautious marches, conducted the independent remains of the nation of the
Ostrogoths towards the Danastus, or Niester; a considerable river, which now separates the
Turkish dominions from the empire of Russia. On the banks of the Niester, the prudent
Athanaric, more attentive to his own than to the general safety, had fixed the camp of the
Visigoths; with the firm resolution of opposing the victorious Barbarians, whom he thought it
less advisable to provoke. The ordinary speed of the Huns was checked by the weight of
baggage, and the encumbrance of captives; but their military skill deceived, and almost
destroyed, the army of Athanaric. While the Judge of the Visigoths defended the banks of the
Niester, he was encompassed and attacked by a numerous detachment of cavalry, who, by the
light of the moon, had passed the river in a fordable place; and it was not without the utmost
efforts of courage and conduct, that he was able to effect his retreat towards the hilly country.
The undaunted general had already formed a new and judicious plan of defensive war; and the
strong lines, which he was preparing to construct between the mountains, the Pruth, and the
Danube, would have secured the extensive and fertile territory that bears the modern name of
Walachia, from the destructive inroads of the Huns. But the hopes and measures of the Judge of
the Visigoths was soon disappointed, by the trembling impatience of his dismayed countrymen;
who were persuaded by their fears, that the interposition of the Danube was the only barrier that
could save them from the rapid pursuit, and invincible valor, of the Barbarians of Scythia. Under
the command of Fritigern and Alavivus, the body of the nation hastily advanced to the banks of
the great river, and implored the protection of the Roman emperor of the East. Athanaric
himself, still anxious to avoid the guilt of perjury, retired, with a band of faithful followers, into
the mountainous country of Caucaland; which appears to have been guarded, and almost
concealed, by the impenetrable forests of Transylvania. *
Chapter XXVI: Progress of The Huns. -- Part III.
After Valens had terminated the Gothic war with some appearance of glory and success, he
made a progress through his dominions of Asia, and at length fixed his residence in the capital of
Syria. The five years which he spent at Antioch was employed to watch, from a secure distance,
the hostile designs of the Persian monarch; to check the depredations of the Saracens and
Isaurians; to enforce, by arguments more prevalent than those of reason and eloquence, the
belief of the Arian theology; and to satisfy his anxious suspicions by the promiscuous execution
of the innocent and the guilty. But the attention of the emperor was most seriously engaged, by
the important intelligence which he received from the civil and military officers who were
intrusted with the defence of the Danube. He was informed, that the North was agitated by a
furious tempest; that the irruption of the Huns, an unknown and monstrous race of savages, had
subverted the power of the Goths; and that the suppliant multitudes of that warlike nation, whose
pride was now humbled in the dust, covered a space of many miles along the banks of the river.
With outstretched arms, and pathetic lamentations, they loudly deplored their past misfortunes
and their present danger; acknowledged that their only hope of safety was in the clemency of the
Roman government; and most solemnly protested, that if the gracious liberality of the emperor
would permit them to cultivate the waste lands of Thrace, they should ever hold themselves
bound, by the strongest obligations of duty and gratitude, to obey the laws, and to guard the
limits, of the republic. These assurances were confirmed by the ambassadors of the Goths, * who
impatiently expected from the mouth of Valens an answer that must finally determine the fate of
their unhappy countrymen. The emperor of the East was no longer guided by the wisdom and
authority of his elder brother, whose death happened towards the end of the preceding year; and
as the distressful situation of the Goths required an instant and peremptory decision, he was
deprived of the favorite resources of feeble and timid minds, who consider the use of dilatory
and ambiguous measures as the most admirable efforts of consummate prudence. As long as the
same passions and interests subsist among mankind, the questions of war and peace, of justice
and policy, which were debated in the councils of antiquity, will frequently present themselves
as the subject of modern deliberation. But the most experienced statesman of Europe has never
been summoned to consider the propriety, or the danger, of admitting, or rejecting, an
innumerable multitude of Barbarians, who are driven by despair and hunger to solicit a
settlement on the territories of a civilized nation. When that important proposition, so essentially
connected with the public safety, was referred to the ministers of Valens, they were perplexed
and divided; but they soon acquiesced in the flattering sentiment which seemed the most
favorable to the pride, the indolence, and the avarice of their sovereign. The slaves, who were
decorated with the titles of præfects and generals, dissembled or disregarded the terrors of this
national emigration; so extremely different from the partial and accidental colonies, which had
been received on the extreme limits of the empire. But they applauded the liberality of fortune,
which had conducted, from the most distant countries of the globe, a numerous and invincible
army of strangers, to defend the throne of Valens; who might now add to the royal treasures the
immense sums of gold supplied by the provincials to compensate their annual proportion of
recruits. The prayers of the Goths were granted, and their service was accepted by the Imperial
court: and orders were immediately despatched to the civil and military governors of the
Thracian diocese, to make the necessary preparations for the passage and subsistence of a great
people, till a proper and sufficient territory could be allotted for their future residence. The
liberality of the emperor was accompanied, however, with two harsh and rigorous conditions,
which prudence might justify on the side of the Romans; but which distress alone could extort
from the indignant Goths. Before they passed the Danube, they were required to deliver their
arms: and it was insisted, that their children should be taken from them, and dispersed through
the provinces of Asia; where they might be civilized by the arts of education, and serve as
hostages to secure the fidelity of their parents.
During the suspense of a doubtful and distant negotiation, the impatient Goths made some rash
attempts to pass the Danube, without the permission of the government, whose protection they
had implored. Their motions were strictly observed by the vigilance of the troops which were
stationed along the river and their foremost detachments were defeated with considerable
slaughter; yet such were the timid councils of the reign of Valens, that the brave officers who
had served their country in the execution of their duty, were punished by the loss of their
employments, and narrowly escaped the loss of their heads. The Imperial mandate was at length
received for transporting over the Danube the whole body of the Gothic nation; but the
execution of this order was a task of labor and difficulty. The stream of the Danube, which in
those parts is above a mile broad, had been swelled by incessant rains; and in this tumultuous
passage, many were swept away, and drowned, by the rapid violence of the current. A large fleet
of vessels, of boats, and of canoes, was provided; many days and nights they passed and repassed
with indefatigable toil; and the most strenuous diligence was exerted by the officers of Valens,
that not a single Barbarian, of those who were reserved to subvert the foundations of Rome,
should be left on the opposite shore. It was thought expedient that an accurate account should be
taken of their numbers; but the persons who were employed soon desisted, with amazement and
dismay, from the prosecution of the endless and impracticable task: and the principal historian
of the age most seriously affirms, that the prodigious armies of Darius and Xerxes, which had so
long been considered as the fables of vain and credulous antiquity, were now justified, in the
eyes of mankind, by the evidence of fact and experience. A probable testimony has fixed the
number of the Gothic warriors at two hundred thousand men: and if we can venture to add the
just proportion of women, of children, and of slaves, the whole mass of people which composed
this formidable emigration, must have amounted to near a million of persons, of both sexes, and
of all ages. The children of the Goths, those at least of a distinguished rank, were separated from
the multitude. They were conducted, without delay, to the distant seats assigned for their
residence and education; and as the numerous train of hostages or captives passed through the
cities, their gay and splendid apparel, their robust and martial figure, excited the surprise and
envy of the Provincials. * But the stipulation, the most offensive to the Goths, and the most
important to the Romans, was shamefully eluded. The Barbarians, who considered their arms as
the ensigns of honor and the pledges of safety, were disposed to offer a price, which the lust or
avarice of the Imperial officers was easily tempted to accept. To preserve their arms, the haughty
warriors consented, with some reluctance, to prostitute their wives or their daughters; the charms
of a beauteous maid, or a comely boy, secured the connivance of the inspectors; who sometimes
cast an eye of covetousness on the fringed carpets and linen garments of their new allies, or who
sacrificed their duty to the mean consideration of filling their farms with cattle, and their houses
with slaves. The Goths, with arms in their hands, were permitted to enter the boats; and when
their strength was collected on the other side of the river, the immense camp which was spread
over the plains and the hills of the Lower Mæsia, assumed a threatening and even hostile aspect.
The leaders of the Ostrogoths, Alatheus and Saphrax, the guardians of their infant king, appeared
soon afterwards on the Northern banks of the Danube; and immediately despatched their
ambassadors to the court of Antioch, to solicit, with the same professions of allegiance and
gratitude, the same favor which had been granted to the suppliant Visigoths. The absolute refusal
of Valens suspended their progress, and discovered the repentance, the suspicions, and the fears,
of the Imperial council.
An undisciplined and unsettled nation of Barbarians required the firmest temper, and the most
dexterous management. The daily subsistence of near a million of extraordinary subjects could
be supplied only by constant and skilful diligence, and might continually be interrupted by
mistake or accident. The insolence, or the indignation, of the Goths, if they conceived
themselves to be the objects either of fear or of contempt, might urge them to the most desperate
extremities; and the fortune of the state seemed to depend on the prudence, as well as the
integrity, of the generals of Valens. At this important crisis, the military government of Thrace
was exercised by Lupicinus and Maximus, in whose venal minds the slightest hope of private
emolument outweighed every consideration of public advantage; and whose guilt was only
alleviated by their incapacity of discerning the pernicious effects of their rash and criminal
administration. Instead of obeying the orders of their sovereign, and satisfying, with decent
liberality, the demands of the Goths, they levied an ungenerous and oppressive tax on the wants
of the hungry Barbarians. The vilest food was sold at an extravagant price; and, in the room of
wholesome and substantial provisions, the markets were filled with the flesh of dogs, and of
unclean animals, who had died of disease. To obtain the valuable acquisition of a pound of
bread, the Goths resigned the possession of an expensive, though serviceable, slave; and a small
quantity of meat was greedily purchased with ten pounds of a precious, but useless metal, when
their property was exhausted, they continued this necessary traffic by the sale of their sons and
daughters; and notwithstanding the love of freedom, which animated every Gothic breast, they
submitted to the humiliating maxim, that it was better for their children to be maintained in a
servile condition, than to perish in a state of wretched and helpless independence. The most
lively resentment is excited by the tyranny of pretended benefactors, who sternly exact the debt
of gratitude which they have cancelled by subsequent injuries: a spirit of discontent insensibly
arose in the camp of the Barbarians, who pleaded, without success, the merit of their patient and
dutiful behavior; and loudly complained of the inhospitable treatment which they had received
from their new allies. They beheld around them the wealth and plenty of a fertile province, in the
midst of which they suffered the intolerable hardships of artificial famine. But the means of
relief, and even of revenge, were in their hands; since the rapaciousness of their tyrants had left
to an injured people the possession and the use of arms. The clamors of a multitude, untaught to
disguise their sentiments, announced the first symptoms of resistance, and alarmed the timid and
guilty minds of Lupicinus and Maximus. Those crafty ministers, who substituted the cunning of
temporary expedients to the wise and salutary counsels of general policy, attempted to remove
the Goths from their dangerous station on the frontiers of the empire; and to disperse them, in
separate quarters of cantonment, through the interior provinces. As they were conscious how ill
they had deserved the respect, or confidence, of the Barbarians, they diligently collected, from
every side, a military force, that might urge the tardy and reluctant march of a people, who had
not yet renounced the title, or the duties, of Roman subjects. But the generals of Valens, while
their attention was solely directed to the discontented Visigoths, imprudently disarmed the ships
and the fortifications which constituted the defence of the Danube. The fatal oversight was
observed, and improved, by Alatheus and Saphrax, who anxiously watched the favorable
moment of escaping from the pursuit of the Huns. By the help of such rafts and vessels as could
be hastily procured, the leaders of the Ostrogoths transported, without opposition, their king and
their army; and boldly fixed a hostile and independent camp on the territories of the empire.
Under the name of Judges, Alavivus and Fritigern were the leaders of the Visigoths in peace and
war; and the authority which they derived from their birth was ratified by the free consent of the
nation. In a season of tranquility, their power might have been equal, as well as their rank; but,
as soon as their countrymen were exasperated by hunger and oppression, the superior abilities of
Fritigern assumed the military command, which he was qualified to exercise for the public
welfare. He restrained the impatient spirit of the Visigoths till the injuries and the insults of their
tyrants should justify their resistance in the opinion of mankind: but he was not disposed to
sacrifice any solid advantages for the empty praise of justice and moderation. Sensible of the
benefits which would result from the union of the Gothic powers under the same standard, he
secretly cultivated the friendship of the Ostrogoths; and while he professed an implicit
obedience to the orders of the Roman generals, he proceeded by slow marches towards
Marcianopolis, the capital of the Lower Mæsia, about seventy miles from the banks of the
Danube. On that fatal spot, the flames of discord and mutual hatred burst forth into a dreadful
conflagration. Lupicinus had invited the Gothic chiefs to a splendid entertainment; and their
martial train remained under arms at the entrance of the palace. But the gates of the city were
strictly guarded, and the Barbarians were sternly excluded from the use of a plentiful market, to
which they asserted their equal claim of subjects and allies. Their humble prayers were rejected
with insolence and derision; and as their patience was now exhausted, the townsmen, the
soldiers, and the Goths, were soon involved in a conflict of passionate altercation and angry
reproaches. A blow was imprudently given; a sword was hastily drawn; and the first blood that
was spilt in this accidental quarrel, became the signal of a long and destructive war. In the midst
of noise and brutal intemperance, Lupicinus was informed, by a secret messenger, that many of
his soldiers were slain, and despoiled of their arms; and as he was already inflamed by wine, and
oppressed by sleep he issued a rash command, that their death should be revenged by the
massacre of the guards of Fritigern and Alavivus. The clamorous shouts and dying groans
apprised Fritigern of his extreme danger; and, as he possessed the calm and intrepid spirit of a
hero, he saw that he was lost if he allowed a moment of deliberation to the man who had so
deeply injured him. "A trifling dispute," said the Gothic leader, with a firm but gentle tone of
voice, "appears to have arisen between the two nations; but it may be productive of the most
dangerous consequences, unless the tumult is immediately pacified by the assurance of our
safety, and the authority of our presence." At these words, Fritigern and his companions drew
their swords, opened their passage through the unresisting crowd, which filled the palace, the
streets, and the gates, of Marcianopolis, and, mounting their horses, hastily vanished from the
eyes of the astonished Romans. The generals of the Goths were saluted by the fierce and joyful
acclamations of the camp; war was instantly resolved, and the resolution was executed without
delay: the banners of the nation were displayed according to the custom of their ancestors; and
the air resounded with the harsh and mournful music of the Barbarian trumpet. The weak and
guilty Lupicinus, who had dared to provoke, who had neglected to destroy, and who still
presumed to despise, his formidable enemy, marched against the Goths, at the head of such a
military force as could be collected on this sudden emergency. The Barbarians expected his
approach about nine miles from Marcianopolis; and on this occasion the talents of the general
were found to be of more prevailing efficacy than the weapons and discipline of the troops. The
valor of the Goths was so ably directed by the genius of Fritigern, that they broke, by a close and
vigorous attack, the ranks of the Roman legions. Lupicinus left his arms and standards, his
tribunes and his bravest soldiers, on the field of battle; and their useless courage served only to
protect the ignominious flight of their leader. "That successful day put an end to the distress of
the Barbarians, and the security of the Romans: from that day, the Goths, renouncing the
precarious condition of strangers and exiles, assumed the character of citizens and masters,
claimed an absolute dominion over the possessors of land, and held, in their own right, the
northern provinces of the empire, which are bounded by the Danube." Such are the words of the
Gothic historian, who celebrates, with rude eloquence, the glory of his countrymen. But the
dominion of the Barbarians was exercised only for the purposes of rapine and destruction. As
they had been deprived, by the ministers of the emperor, of the common benefits of nature, and
the fair intercourse of social life, they retaliated the injustice on the subjects of the empire; and
the crimes of Lupicinus were expiated by the ruin of the peaceful husbandmen of Thrace, the
conflagration of their villages, and the massacre, or captivity, of their innocent families. The
report of the Gothic victory was soon diffused over the adjacent country; and while it filled the
minds of the Romans with terror and dismay, their own hasty imprudence contributed to increase
the forces of Fritigern, and the calamities of the province. Some time before the great
emigration, a numerous body of Goths, under the command of Suerid and Colias, had been
received into the protection and service of the empire. They were encamped under the walls of
Hadrianople; but the ministers of Valens were anxious to remove them beyond the Hellespont, at
a distance from the dangerous temptation which might so easily be communicated by the
neighborhood, and the success, of their countrymen. The respectful submission with which they
yielded to the order of their march, might be considered as a proof of their fidelity; and their
moderate request of a sufficient allowance of provisions, and of a delay of only two days was
expressed in the most dutiful terms. But the first magistrate of Hadrianople, incensed by some
disorders which had been committed at his country-house, refused this indulgence; and arming
against them the inhabitants and manufacturers of a populous city, he urged, with hostile threats,
their instant departure. The Barbarians stood silent and amazed, till they were exasperated by the
insulting clamors, and missile weapons, of the populace: but when patience or contempt was
fatigued, they crushed the undisciplined multitude, inflicted many a shameful wound on the
backs of their flying enemies, and despoiled them of the splendid armor, which they were
unworthy to bear. The resemblance of their sufferings and their actions soon united this
victorious detachment to the nation of the Visigoths; the troops of Colias and Suerid expected
the approach of the great Fritigern, ranged themselves under his standard, and signalized their
ardor in the siege of Hadrianople. But the resistance of the garrison informed the Barbarians,
that in the attack of regular fortifications, the efforts of unskillful courage are seldom effectual.
Their general acknowledged his error, raised the siege, declared that "he was at peace with stone
walls," and revenged his disappointment on the adjacent country. He accepted, with pleasure,
the useful reenforcement of hardy workmen, who labored in the gold mines of Thrace, for the
emolument, and under the lash, of an unfeeling master: and these new associates conducted the
Barbarians, through the secret paths, to the most sequestered places, which had been chosen to
secure the inhabitants, the cattle, and the magazines of corn. With the assistance of such guides,
nothing could remain impervious or inaccessible; resistance was fatal; flight was impracticable;
and the patient submission of helpless innocence seldom found mercy from the Barbarian
conqueror. In the course of these depredations, a great number of the children of the Goths, who
had been sold into captivity, were restored to the embraces of their afflicted parents; but these
tender interviews, which might have revived and cherished in their minds some sentiments of
humanity, tended only to stimulate their native fierceness by the desire of revenge. They
listened, with eager attention, to the complaints of their captive children, who had suffered the
most cruel indignities from the lustful or angry passions of their masters, and the same cruelties,
the same indignities, were severely retaliated on the sons and daughters of the Romans.
The imprudence of Valens and his ministers had introduced into the heart of the empire a nation
of enemies; but the Visigoths might even yet have been reconciled, by the manly confession of
past errors, and the sincere performance of former engagements. These healing and temperate
measures seemed to concur with the timorous disposition of the sovereign of the East: but, on
this occasion alone, Valens was brave; and his unseasonable bravery was fatal to himself and to
his subjects. He declared his intention of marching from Antioch to Constantinople, to subdue
this dangerous rebellion; and, as he was not ignorant of the difficulties of the enterprise, he
solicited the assistance of his nephew, the emperor Gratian, who commanded all the forces of
the West. The veteran troops were hastily recalled from the defence of Armenia; that important
frontier was abandoned to the discretion of Sapor; and the immediate conduct of the Gothic war
was intrusted, during the absence of Valens, to his lieutenants Trajan and Profuturus, two
generals who indulged themselves in a very false and favorable opinion of their own abilities.
On their arrival in Thrace, they were joined by Richomer, count of the domestics; and the
auxiliaries of the West, that marched under his banner, were composed of the Gallic legions,
reduced indeed, by a spirit of desertion, to the vain appearances of strength and numbers. In a
council of war, which was influenced by pride, rather than by reason, it was resolved to seek,
and to encounter, the Barbarians, who lay encamped in the spacious and fertile meadows, near
the most southern of the six mouths of the Danube. Their camp was surrounded by the usual
fortification of wagons; and the Barbarians, secure within the vast circle of the enclosure,
enjoyed the fruits of their valor, and the spoils of the province. In the midst of riotous
intemperance, the watchful Fritigern observed the motions, and penetrated the designs, of the
Romans. He perceived, that the numbers of the enemy were continually increasing: and, as he
understood their intention of attacking his rear, as soon as the scarcity of forage should oblige
him to remove his camp, he recalled to their standard his predatory detachments, which covered
the adjacent country. As soon as they descried the flaming beacons, they obeyed, with incredible
speed, the signal of their leader: the camp was filled with the martial crowd of Barbarians; their
impatient clamors demanded the battle, and their tumultuous zeal was approved and animated by
the spirit of their chiefs. The evening was already far advanced; and the two armies prepared
themselves for the approaching combat, which was deferred only till the dawn of day. While the
trumpets sounded to arms, the undaunted courage of the Goths was confirmed by the mutual
obligation of a solemn oath; and as they advanced to meet the enemy, the rude songs, which
celebrated the glory of their forefathers, were mingled with their fierce and dissonant outcries,
and opposed to the artificial harmony of the Roman shout. Some military skill was displayed by
Fritigern to gain the advantage of a commanding eminence; but the bloody conflict, which began
and ended with the light, was maintained on either side, by the personal and obstinate efforts of
strength, valor, and agility. The legions of Armenia supported their fame in arms; but they were
oppressed by the irresistible weight of the hostile multitude the left wing of the Romans was
thrown into disorder and the field was strewed with their mangled carcasses. This partial defeat
was balanced, however, by partial success; and when the two armies, at a late hour of the
evening, retreated to their respective camps, neither of them could claim the honors, or the
effects, of a decisive victory. The real loss was more severely felt by the Romans, in proportion
to the smallness of their numbers; but the Goths were so deeply confounded and dismayed by
this vigorous, and perhaps unexpected, resistance, that they remained seven days within the
circle of their fortifications. Such funeral rites, as the circumstances of time and place would
admit, were piously discharged to some officers of distinguished rank; but the indiscriminate
vulgar was left unburied on the plain. Their flesh was greedily devoured by the birds of prey,
who in that age enjoyed very frequent and delicious feasts; and several years afterwards the
white and naked bones, which covered the wide extent of the fields, presented to the eyes of
Ammianus a dreadful monument of the battle of Salices.
The progress of the Goths had been checked by the doubtful event of that bloody day; and the
Imperial generals, whose army would have been consumed by the repetition of such a contest,
embraced the more rational plan of destroying the Barbarians by the wants and pressure of their
own multitudes. They prepared to confine the Visigoths in the narrow angle of land between the
Danube, the desert of Scythia, and the mountains of Hæmus, till their strength and spirit should
be insensibly wasted by the inevitable operation of famine. The design was prosecuted with
some conduct and success: the Barbarians had almost exhausted their own magazines, and the
harvests of the country; and the diligence of Saturninus, the master-general of the cavalry, was
employed to improve the strength, and to contract the extent, of the Roman fortifications. His
labors were interrupted by the alarming intelligence, that new swarms of Barbarians had passed
the unguarded Danube, either to support the cause, or to imitate the example, of Fritigern. The
just apprehension, that he himself might be surrounded, and overwhelmed, by the arms of hostile
and unknown nations, compelled Saturninus to relinquish the siege of the Gothic camp; and the
indignant Visigoths, breaking from their confinement, satiated their hunger and revenge by the
repeated devastation of the fruitful country, which extends above three hundred miles from the
banks of the Danube to the straits of the Hellespont. The sagacious Fritigern had successfully
appealed to the passions, as well as to the interest, of his Barbarian allies; and the love of rapine,
and the hatred of Rome, seconded, or even prevented, the eloquence of his ambassadors. He
cemented a strict and useful alliance with the great body of his countrymen, who obeyed
Alatheus and Saphrax as the guardians of their infant king: the long animosity of rival tribes was
suspended by the sense of their common interest; the independent part of the nation was
associated under one standard; and the chiefs of the Ostrogoths appear to have yielded to the
superior genius of the general of the Visigoths. He obtained the formidable aid of the Taifalæ, *
whose military renown was disgraced and polluted by the public infamy of their domestic
manners. Every youth, on his entrance into the world, was united by the ties of honorable
friendship, and brutal love, to some warrior of the tribe; nor could he hope to be released from
this unnatural connection, till he had approved his manhood by slaying, in single combat, a huge
bear, or a wild boar of the forest. But the most powerful auxiliaries of the Goths were drawn
from the camp of those enemies who had expelled them from their native seats. The loose
subordination, and extensive possessions, of the Huns and the Alani, delayed the conquests, and
distracted the councils, of that victorious people. Several of the hords were allured by the liberal
promises of Fritigern; and the rapid cavalry of Scythia added weight and energy to the steady and
strenuous efforts of the Gothic infantry. The Sarmatians, who could never forgive the successor
of Valentinian, enjoyed and increased the general confusion; and a seasonable irruption of the
Alemanni, into the provinces of Gaul, engaged the attention, and diverted the forces, of the
emperor of the West.
Chapter XXVI: Progress of The Huns. -- Part IV.
One of the most dangerous inconveniences of the introduction of the Barbarians into the army
and the palace, was sensibly felt in their correspondence with their hostile countrymen; to whom
they imprudently, or maliciously, revealed the weakness of the Roman empire. A soldier, of the
lifeguards of Gratian, was of the nation of the Alemanni, and of the tribe of the Lentienses, who
dwelt beyond the Lake of Constance. Some domestic business obliged him to request a leave of
absence. In a short visit to his family and friends, he was exposed to their curious inquiries: and
the vanity of the loquacious soldier tempted him to display his intimate acquaintance with the
secrets of the state, and the designs of his master. The intelligence, that Gratian was preparing to
lead the military force of Gaul, and of the West, to the assistance of his uncle Valens, pointed
out to the restless spirit of the Alemanni the moment, and the mode, of a successful invasion.
The enterprise of some light detachments, who, in the month of February, passed the Rhine upon
the ice, was the prelude of a more important war. The boldest hopes of rapine, perhaps of
conquest, outweighed the considerations of timid prudence, or national faith. Every forest, and
every village, poured forth a band of hardy adventurers; and the great army of the Alemanni,
which, on their approach, was estimated at forty thousand men by the fears of the people, was
afterwards magnified to the number of seventy thousand by the vain and credulous flattery of the
Imperial court. The legions, which had been ordered to march into Pannonia, were immediately
recalled, or detained, for the defence of Gaul; the military command was divided between
Nanienus and Mellobaudes; and the youthful emperor, though he respected the long experience
and sober wisdom of the former, was much more inclined to admire, and to follow, the martial
ardor of his colleague; who was allowed to unite the incompatible characters of count of the
domestics, and of king of the Franks. His rival Priarius, king of the Alemanni, was guided, or
rather impelled, by the same headstrong valor; and as their troops were animated by the spirit of
their leaders, they met, they saw, they encountered each other, near the town of Argentaria, or
Colmar, in the plains of Alsace. The glory of the day was justly ascribed to the missile weapons,
and well-practised evolutions, of the Roman soldiers; the Alemanni, who long maintained their
ground, were slaughtered with unrelenting fury; five thousand only of the Barbarians escaped to
the woods and mountains; and the glorious death of their king on the field of battle saved him
from the reproaches of the people, who are always disposed to accuse the justice, or policy, of an
unsuccessful war. After this signal victory, which secured the peace of Gaul, and asserted the
honor of the Roman arms, the emperor Gratian appeared to proceed without delay on his Eastern
expedition; but as he approached the confines of the Alemanni, he suddenly inclined to the left,
surprised them by his unexpected passage of the Rhine, and boldly advanced into the heart of
their country. The Barbarians opposed to his progress the obstacles of nature and of courage; and
still continued to retreat, from one hill to another, till they were satisfied, by repeated trials, of
the power and perseverance of their enemies. Their submission was accepted as a proof, not
indeed of their sincere repentance, but of their actual distress; and a select number of their brave
and robust youth was exacted from the faithless nation, as the most substantial pledge of their
future moderation. The subjects of the empire, who had so often experienced that the Alemanni
could neither be subdued by arms, nor restrained by treaties, might not promise themselves any
solid or lasting tranquillity: but they discovered, in the virtues of their young sovereign, the
prospect of a long and auspicious reign. When the legions climbed the mountains, and scaled the
fortifications of the Barbarians, the valor of Gratian was distinguished in the foremost ranks; and
the gilt and variegated armor of his guards was pierced and shattered by the blows which they
had received in their constant attachment to the person of their sovereign. At the age of nineteen,
the son of Valentinian seemed to possess the talents of peace and war; and his personal success
against the Alemanni was interpreted as a sure presage of his Gothic triumphs.
While Gratian deserved and enjoyed the applause of his subjects, the emperor Valens, who, at
length, had removed his court and army from Antioch, was received by the people of
Constantinople as the author of the public calamity. Before he had reposed himself ten days in
the capital, he was urged by the licentious clamors of the Hippodrome to march against the
Barbarians, whom he had invited into his dominions; and the citizens, who are always brave at a
distance from any real danger, declared, with confidence, that, if they were supplied with arms,
they alone would undertake to deliver the province from the ravages of an insulting foe. The
vain reproaches of an ignorant multitude hastened the downfall of the Roman empire; they
provoked the desperate rashness of Valens; who did not find, either in his reputation or in his
mind, any motives to support with firmness the public contempt. He was soon persuaded, by the
successful achievements of his lieutenants, to despise the power of the Goths, who, by the
diligence of Fritigern, were now collected in the neighborhood of Hadrianople. The march of the
Taifalæ had been intercepted by the valiant Frigerid: the king of those licentious Barbarians was
slain in battle; and the suppliant captives were sent into distant exile to cultivate the lands of
Italy, which were assigned for their settlement in the vacant territories of Modena and Parma.
The exploits of Sebastian, who was recently engaged in the service of Valens, and promoted to
the rank of master-general of the infantry, were still more honorable to himself, and useful to the
republic. He obtained the permission of selecting three hundred soldiers from each of the
legions; and this separate detachment soon acquired the spirit of discipline, and the exercise of
arms, which were almost forgotten under the reign of Valens. By the vigor and conduct of
Sebastian, a large body of the Goths were surprised in their camp; and the immense spoil, which
was recovered from their hands, filled the city of Hadrianople, and the adjacent plain. The
splendid narratives, which the general transmitted of his own exploits, alarmed the Imperial
court by the appearance of superior merit; and though he cautiously insisted on the difficulties of
the Gothic war, his valor was praised, his advice was rejected; and Valens, who listened with
pride and pleasure to the flattering suggestions of the eunuchs of the palace, was impatient to
seize the glory of an easy and assured conquest. His army was strengthened by a numerous
reenforcement of veterans; and his march from Constantinople to Hadrianople was conducted
with so much military skill, that he prevented the activity of the Barbarians, who designed to
occupy the intermediate defiles, and to intercept either the troops themselves, or their convoys of
provisions. The camp of Valens, which he pitched under the walls of Hadrianople, was fortified,
according to the practice of the Romans, with a ditch and rampart; and a most important council
was summoned, to decide the fate of the emperor and of the empire. The party of reason and of
delay was strenuously maintained by Victor, who had corrected, by the lessons of experience,
the native fierceness of the Sarmatian character; while Sebastian, with the flexible and
obsequious eloquence of a courtier, represented every precaution, and every measure, that
implied a doubt of immediate victory, as unworthy of the courage and majesty of their invincible
monarch. The ruin of Valens was precipitated by the deceitful arts of Fritigern, and the prudent
admonitions of the emperor of the West. The advantages of negotiating in the midst of war were
perfectly understood by the general of the Barbarians; and a Christian ecclesiastic was
despatched, as the holy minister of peace, to penetrate, and to perplex, the councils of the
enemy. The misfortunes, as well as the provocations, of the Gothic nation, were forcibly and
truly described by their ambassador; who protested, in the name of Fritigern, that he was still
disposed to lay down his arms, or to employ them only in the defence of the empire; if he could
secure for his wandering countrymen a tranquil settlement on the waste lands of Thrace, and a
sufficient allowance of corn and cattle. But he added, in a whisper of confidential friendship,
that the exasperated Barbarians were averse to these reasonable conditions; and that Fritigern
was doubtful whether he could accomplish the conclusion of the treaty, unless he found himself
supported by the presence and terrors of an Imperial army. About the same time, Count
Richomer returned from the West to announce the defeat and submission of the Alemanni, to
inform Valens that his nephew advanced by rapid marches at the head of the veteran and
victorious legions of Gaul, and to request, in the name of Gratian and of the republic, that every
dangerous and decisive measure might be suspended, till the junction of the two emperors
should insure the success of the Gothic war. But the feeble sovereign of the East was actuated
only by the fatal illusions of pride and jealousy. He disdained the importunate advice; he
rejected the humiliating aid; he secretly compared the ignominious, at least the inglorious,
period of his own reign, with the fame of a beardless youth; and Valens rushed into the field, to
erect his imaginary trophy, before the diligence of his colleague could usurp any share of the
triumphs of the day.
On the ninth of August, a day which has deserved to be marked among the most inauspicious of
the Roman Calendar, the emperor Valens, leaving, under a strong guard, his baggage and
military treasure, marched from Hadrianople to attack the Goths, who were encamped about
twelve miles from the city. By some mistake of the orders, or some ignorance of the ground, the
right wing, or column of cavalry arrived in sight of the enemy, whilst the left was still at a
considerable distance; the soldiers were compelled, in the sultry heat of summer, to precipitate
their pace; and the line of battle was formed with tedious confusion and irregular delay. The
Gothic cavalry had been detached to forage in the adjacent country; and Fritigern still continued
to practise his customary arts. He despatched messengers of peace, made proposals, required
hostages, and wasted the hours, till the Romans, exposed without shelter to the burning rays of
the sun, were exhausted by thirst, hunger, and intolerable fatigue. The emperor was persuaded to
send an ambassador to the Gothic camp; the zeal of Richomer, who alone had courage to accept
the dangerous commission, was applauded; and the count of the domestics, adorned with the
splendid ensigns of his dignity, had proceeded some way in the space between the two armies,
when he was suddenly recalled by the alarm of battle. The hasty and imprudent attack was made
by Bacurius the Iberian, who commanded a body of archers and targiteers; and as they advanced
with rashness, they retreated with loss and disgrace. In the same moment, the flying squadrons of
Alatheus and Saphrax, whose return was anxiously expected by the general of the Goths,
descended like a whirlwind from the hills, swept across the plain, and added new terrors to the
tumultuous, but irresistible charge of the Barbarian host. The event of the battle of Hadrianople,
so fatal to Valens and to the empire, may be described in a few words: the Roman cavalry fled;
the infantry was abandoned, surrounded, and cut in pieces. The most skilful evolutions, the
firmest courage, are scarcely sufficient to extricate a body of foot, encompassed, on an open
plain, by superior numbers of horse; but the troops of Valens, oppressed by the weight of the
enemy and their own fears, were crowded into a narrow space, where it was impossible for them
to extend their ranks, or even to use, with effect, their swords and javelins. In the midst of
tumult, of slaughter, and of dismay, the emperor, deserted by his guards and wounded, as it was
supposed, with an arrow, sought protection among the Lancearii and the Mattiarii, who still
maintained their ground with some appearance of order and firmness. His faithful generals,
Trajan and Victor, who perceived his danger, loudly exclaimed that all was lost, unless the
person of the emperor could be saved. Some troops, animated by their exhortation, advanced to
his relief: they found only a bloody spot, covered with a heap of broken arms and mangled
bodies, without being able to discover their unfortunate prince, either among the living or the
dead. Their search could not indeed be successful, if there is any truth in the circumstances with
which some historians have related the death of the emperor. By the care of his attendants,
Valens was removed from the field of battle to a neighboring cottage, where they attempted to
dress his wound, and to provide for his future safety. But this humble retreat was instantly
surrounded by the enemy: they tried to force the door, they were provoked by a discharge of
arrows from the roof, till at length, impatient of delay, they set fire to a pile of dry fagots, and
consumed the cottage with the Roman emperor and his train. Valens perished in the flames; and
a youth, who dropped from the window, alone escaped, to attest the melancholy tale, and to
inform the Goths of the inestimable prize which they had lost by their own rashness. A great
number of brave and distinguished officers perished in the battle of Hadrianople, which equalled
in the actual loss, and far surpassed in the fatal consequences, the misfortune which Rome had
formerly sustained in the fields of Cannæ. Two master-generals of the cavalry and infantry, two
great officers of the palace, and thirty-five tribunes, were found among the slain; and the death
of Sebastian might satisfy the world, that he was the victim, as well as the author, of the public
calamity. Above two thirds of the Roman army were destroyed: and the darkness of the night
was esteemed a very favorable circumstance, as it served to conceal the flight of the multitude,
and to protect the more orderly retreat of Victor and Richomer, who alone, amidst the general
consternation, maintained the advantage of calm courage and regular discipline.
While the impressions of grief and terror were still recent in the minds of men, the most
celebrated rhetorician of the age composed the funeral oration of a vanquished army, and of an
unpopular prince, whose throne was already occupied by a stranger. "There are not wanting,"
says the candid Libanius, "those who arraign the prudence of the emperor, or who impute the
public misfortune to the want of courage and discipline in the troops. For my own part, I
reverence the memory of their former exploits: I reverence the glorious death, which they
bravely received, standing, and fighting in their ranks: I reverence the field of battle, stained with
their blood, and the blood of the Barbarians. Those honorable marks have been already washed
away by the rains; but the lofty monuments of their bones, the bones of generals, of centurions,
and of valiant warriors, claim a longer period of duration. The king himself fought and fell in the
foremost ranks of the battle. His attendants presented him with the fleetest horses of the Imperial
stable, that would soon have carried him beyond the pursuit of the enemy. They vainly pressed
him to reserve his important life for the future service of the republic. He still declared that he
was unworthy to survive so many of the bravest and most faithful of his subjects; and the
monarch was nobly buried under a mountain of the slain. Let none, therefore, presume to ascribe
the victory of the Barbarians to the fear, the weakness, or the imprudence, of the Roman troops.
The chiefs and the soldiers were animated by the virtue of their ancestors, whom they equalled
in discipline and the arts of war. Their generous emulation was supported by the love of glory,
which prompted them to contend at the same time with heat and thirst, with fire and the sword;
and cheerfully to embrace an honorable death, as their refuge against flight and infamy. The
indignation of the gods has been the only cause of the success of our enemies." The truth of
history may disclaim some parts of this panegyric, which cannot strictly be reconciled with the
character of Valens, or the circumstances of the battle: but the fairest commendation is due to
the eloquence, and still more to the generosity, of the sophist of Antioch.
The pride of the Goths was elated by this memorable victory; but their avarice was disappointed
by the mortifying discovery, that the richest part of the Imperial spoil had been within the walls
of Hadrianople. They hastened to possess the reward of their valor; but they were encountered by
the remains of a vanquished army, with an intrepid resolution, which was the effect of their
despair, and the only hope of their safety. The walls of the city, and the ramparts of the adjacent
camp, were lined with military engines, that threw stones of an enormous weight; and astonished
the ignorant Barbarians by the noise, and velocity, still more than by the real effects, of the
discharge. The soldiers, the citizens, the provincials, the domestics of the palace, were united in
the danger, and in the defence: the furious assault of the Goths was repulsed; their secret arts of
treachery and treason were discovered; and, after an obstinate conflict of many hours, they
retired to their tents; convinced, by experience, that it would be far more advisable to observe
the treaty, which their sagacious leader had tacitly stipulated with the fortifications of great and
populous cities. After the hasty and impolitic massacre of three hundred deserters, an act of
justice extremely useful to the discipline of the Roman armies, the Goths indignantly raised the
siege of Hadrianople. The scene of war and tumult was instantly converted into a silent solitude:
the multitude suddenly disappeared; the secret paths of the woods and mountains were marked
with the footsteps of the trembling fugitives, who sought a refuge in the distant cities of
Illyricum and Macedonia; and the faithful officers of the household, and the treasury, cautiously
proceeded in search of the emperor, of whose death they were still ignorant. The tide of the
Gothic inundation rolled from the walls of Hadrianople to the suburbs of Constantinople. The
Barbarians were surprised with the splendid appearance of the capital of the East, the height and
extent of the walls, the myriads of wealthy and affrighted citizens who crowded the ramparts,
and the various prospect of the sea and land. While they gazed with hopeless desire on the
inaccessible beauties of Constantinople, a sally was made from one of the gates by a party of
Saracens, who had been fortunately engaged in the service of Valens. The cavalry of Scythia
was forced to yield to the admirable swiftness and spirit of the Arabian horses: their riders were
skilled in the evolutions of irregular war; and the Northern Barbarians were astonished and
dismayed, by the inhuman ferocity of the Barbarians of the South. A Gothic soldier was slain by
the dagger of an Arab; and the hairy, naked savage, applying his lips to the wound, expressed a
horrid delight, while he sucked the blood of his vanquished enemy. The army of the Goths,
laden with the spoils of the wealthy suburbs and the adjacent territory, slowly moved, from the
Bosphorus, to the mountains which form the western boundary of Thrace. The important pass of
Succi was betrayed by the fear, or the misconduct, of Maurus; and the Barbarians, who no longer
had any resistance to apprehend from the scattered and vanquished troops of the East, spread
themselves over the face of a fertile and cultivated country, as far as the confines of Italy and the
Hadriatic Sea.
The Romans, who so coolly, and so concisely, mention the acts of justice which were exercised
by the legions, reserve their compassion, and their eloquence, for their own sufferings, when the
provinces were invaded, and desolated, by the arms of the successful Barbarians. The simple
circumstantial narrative (did such a narrative exist) of the ruin of a single town, of the
misfortunes of a single family, might exhibit an interesting and instructive picture of human
manners: but the tedious repetition of vague and declamatory complaints would fatigue the
attention of the most patient reader. The same censure may be applied, though not perhaps in an
equal degree, to the profane, and the ecclesiastical, writers of this unhappy period; that their
minds were inflamed by popular and religious animosity; and that the true size and color of
every object is falsified by the exaggerations of their corrupt eloquence. The vehement Jerom
might justly deplore the calamities inflicted by the Goths, and their barbarous allies, on his
native country of Pannonia, and the wide extent of the provinces, from the walls of
Constantinople to the foot of the Julian Alps; the rapes, the massacres, the conflagrations; and,
above all, the profanation of the churches, that were turned into stables, and the contemptuous
treatment of the relics of holy martyrs. But the Saint is surely transported beyond the limits of
nature and history, when he affirms, "that, in those desert countries, nothing was left except the
sky and the earth; that, after the destruction of the cities, and the extirpation of the human race,
the land was overgrown with thick forests and inextricable brambles; and that the universal
desolation, announced by the prophet Zephaniah, was accomplished, in the scarcity of the beasts,
the birds, and even of the fish." These complaints were pronounced about twenty years after the
death of Valens; and the Illyrian provinces, which were constantly exposed to the invasion and
passage of the Barbarians, still continued, after a calamitous period of ten centuries, to supply
new materials for rapine and destruction. Could it even be supposed, that a large tract of country
had been left without cultivation and without inhabitants, the consequences might not have been
so fatal to the inferior productions of animated nature. The useful and feeble animals, which are
nourished by the hand of man, might suffer and perish, if they were deprived of his protection;
but the beasts of the forest, his enemies or his victims, would multiply in the free and
undisturbed possession of their solitary domain. The various tribes that people the air, or the
waters, are still less connected with the fate of the human species; and it is highly probable that
the fish of the Danube would have felt more terror and distress, from the approach of a voracious
pike, than from the hostile inroad of a Gothic army.
Chapter XXVI: Progress of The Huns. -- Part V.
Whatever may have been the just measure of the calamities of Europe, there was reason to fear
that the same calamities would soon extend to the peaceful countries of Asia. The sons of the
Goths had been judiciously distributed through the cities of the East; and the arts of education
were employed to polish, and subdue, the native fierceness of their temper. In the space of about
twelve years, their numbers had continually increased; and the children, who, in the first
emigration, were sent over the Hellespont, had attained, with rapid growth, the strength and
spirit of perfect manhood. It was impossible to conceal from their knowledge the events of the
Gothic war; and, as those daring youths had not studied the language of dissimulation, they
betrayed their wish, their desire, perhaps their intention, to emulate the glorious example of their
fathers The danger of the times seemed to justify the jealous suspicions of the provincials; and
these suspicions were admitted as unquestionable evidence, that the Goths of Asia had formed a
secret and dangerous conspiracy against the public safety. The death of Valens had left the East
without a sovereign; and Julius, who filled the important station of master-general of the troops,
with a high reputation of diligence and ability, thought it his duty to consult the senate of
Constantinople; which he considered, during the vacancy of the throne, as the representative
council of the nation. As soon as he had obtained the discretionary power of acting as he should
judge most expedient for the good of the republic, he assembled the principal officers, and
privately concerted effectual measures for the execution of his bloody design. An order was
immediately promulgated, that, on a stated day, the Gothic youth should assemble in the capital
cities of their respective provinces; and, as a report was industriously circulated, that they were
summoned to receive a liberal gift of lands and money, the pleasing hope allayed the fury of
their resentment, and, perhaps, suspended the motions of the conspiracy. On the appointed day,
the unarmed crowd of the Gothic youth was carefully collected in the square or Forum; the
streets and avenues were occupied by the Roman troops, and the roofs of the houses were
covered with archers and slingers. At the same hour, in all the cities of the East, the signal was
given of indiscriminate slaughter; and the provinces of Asia were delivered by the cruel
prudence of Julius, from a domestic enemy, who, in a few months, might have carried fire and
sword from the Hellespont to the Euphrates. The urgent consideration of the public safety may
undoubtedly authorize the violation of every positive law. How far that, or any other,
consideration may operate to dissolve the natural obligations of humanity and justice, is a
doctrine of which I still desire to remain ignorant.
The emperor Gratian was far advanced on his march towards the plains of Hadrianople, when he
was informed, at first by the confused voice of fame, and afterwards by the more accurate
reports of Victor and Richomer, that his impatient colleague had been slain in battle, and that
two thirds of the Roman army were exterminated by the sword of the victorious Goths. Whatever
resentment the rash and jealous vanity of his uncle might deserve, the resentment of a generous
mind is easily subdued by the softer emotions of grief and compassion; and even the sense of
pity was soon lost in the serious and alarming consideration of the state of the republic. Gratian
was too late to assist, he was too weak to revenge, his unfortunate colleague; and the valiant and
modest youth felt himself unequal to the support of a sinking world. A formidable tempest of the
Barbarians of Germany seemed ready to burst over the provinces of Gaul; and the mind of
Gratian was oppressed and distracted by the administration of the Western empire. In this
important crisis, the government of the East, and the conduct of the Gothic war, required the
undivided attention of a hero and a statesman. A subject invested with such ample command
would not long have preserved his fidelity to a distant benefactor; and the Imperial council
embraced the wise and manly resolution of conferring an obligation, rather than of yielding to an
insult. It was the wish of Gratian to bestow the purple as the reward of virtue; but, at the age of
nineteen, it is not easy for a prince, educated in the supreme rank, to understand the true
characters of his ministers and generals. He attempted to weigh, with an impartial hand, their
various merits and defects; and, whilst he checked the rash confidence of ambition, he distrusted
the cautious wisdom which despaired of the republic. As each moment of delay diminished
something of the power and resources of the future sovereign of the East, the situation of the
times would not allow a tedious debate. The choice of Gratian was soon declared in favor of an
exile, whose father, only three years before, had suffered, under the sanction of his authority, an
unjust and ignominious death. The great Theodosius, a name celebrated in history, and dear to
the Catholic church, was summoned to the Imperial court, which had gradually retreated from
the confines of Thrace to the more secure station of Sirmium. Five months after the death of
Valens, the emperor Gratian produced before the assembled troops his colleague and
theirmaster; who, after a modest, perhaps a sincere, resistance, was compelled to accept, amidst
the general acclamations, the diadem, the purple, and the equal title of Augustus. The provinces
of Thrace, Asia, and Egypt, over which Valens had reigned, were resigned to the administration
of the new emperor; but, as he was specially intrusted with the conduct of the Gothic war, the
Illyrian præfecture was dismembered; and the two great dioceses of Dacia and Macedonia were
added to the dominions of the Eastern empire.
The same province, and perhaps the same city, which had given to the throne the virtues of
Trajan, and the talents of Hadrian, was the original seat of another family of Spaniards, who, in a
less fortunate age, possessed, near fourscore years, the declining empire of Rome. They
emerged from the obscurity of municipal honors by the active spirit of the elder Theodosius, a
general whose exploits in Britain and Africa have formed one of the most splendid parts of the
annals of Valentinian. The son of that general, who likewise bore the name of Theodosius, was
educated, by skilful preceptors, in the liberal studies of youth; but he was instructed in the art of
war by the tender care and severe discipline of his father. Under the standard of such a leader,
young Theodosius sought glory and knowledge, in the most distant scenes of military action;
inured his constitution to the difference of seasons and climates; distinguished his valor by sea
and land; and observed the various warfare of the Scots, the Saxons, and the Moors. His own
merit, and the recommendation of the conqueror of Africa, soon raised him to a separate
command; and, in the station of Duke of Mæsia, he vanquished an army of Sarmatians; saved
the province; deserved the love of the soldiers; and provoked the envy of the court. His rising
fortunes were soon blasted by the disgrace and execution of his illustrious father; and
Theodosius obtained, as a favor, the permission of retiring to a private life in his native province
of Spain. He displayed a firm and temperate character in the ease with which he adapted himself
to this new situation. His time was almost equally divided between the town and country; the
spirit, which had animated his public conduct, was shown in the active and affectionate
performance of every social duty; and the diligence of the soldier was profitably converted to the
improvement of his ample patrimony, which lay between Valladolid and Segovia, in the midst
of a fruitful district, still famous for a most exquisite breed of sheep. From the innocent, but
humble labors of his farm, Theodosius was transported, in less than four months, to the throne of
the Eastern empire; and the whole period of the history of the world will not perhaps afford a
similar example, of an elevation at the same time so pure and so honorable. The princes who
peaceably inherit the sceptre of their fathers, claim and enjoy a legal right, the more secure as it
is absolutely distinct from the merits of their personal characters. The subjects, who, in a
monarchy, or a popular state, acquire the possession of supreme power, may have raised
themselves, by the superiority either of genius or virtue, above the heads of their equals; but their
virtue is seldom exempt from ambition; and the cause of the successful candidate is frequently
stained by the guilt of conspiracy, or civil war. Even in those governments which allow the
reigning monarch to declare a colleague or a successor, his partial choice, which may be
influenced by the blindest passions, is often directed to an unworthy object But the most
suspicious malignity cannot ascribe to Theodosius, in his obscure solitude of Caucha, the arts,
the desires, or even the hopes, of an ambitious statesman; and the name of the Exile would long
since have been forgotten, if his genuine and distinguished virtues had not left a deep impression
in the Imperial court. During the season of prosperity, he had been neglected; but, in the public
distress, his superior merit was universally felt and acknowledged. What confidence must have
been reposed in his integrity, since Gratian could trust, that a pious son would forgive, for the
sake of the republic, the murder of his father! What expectations must have been formed of his
abilities to encourage the hope, that a single man could save, and restore, the empire of the East!
Theodosius was invested with the purple in the thirty-third year of his age. The vulgar gazed
with admiration on the manly beauty of his face, and the graceful majesty of his person, which
they were pleased to compare with the pictures and medals of the emperor Trajan; whilst
intelligent observers discovered, in the qualities of his heart and understanding, a more
important resemblance to the best and greatest of the Roman princes.
It is not without the most sincere regret, that I must now take leave of an accurate and faithful
guide, who has composed the history of his own times, without indulging the prejudices and
passions, which usually affect the mind of a contemporary. Ammianus Marcellinus, who
terminates his useful work with the defeat and death of Valens, recommends the more glorious
subject of the ensuing reign to the youthful vigor and eloquence of the rising generation. The
rising generation was not disposed to accept his advice or to imitate his example; and, in the
study of the reign of Theodosius, we are reduced to illustrate the partial narrative of Zosimus, by
the obscure hints of fragments and chronicles, by the figurative style of poetry or panegyric, and
by the precarious assistance of the ecclesiastical writers, who, in the heat of religious faction, are
apt to despise the profane virtues of sincerity and moderation. Conscious of these disadvantages,
which will continue to involve a considerable portion of the decline and fall of the Roman
empire, I shall proceed with doubtful and timorous steps. Yet I may boldly pronounce, that the
battle of Hadrianople was never revenged by any signal or decisive victory of Theodosius over
the Barbarians: and the expressive silence of his venal orators may be confirmed by the
observation of the condition and circumstances of the times. The fabric of a mighty state, which
has been reared by the labors of successive ages, could not be overturned by the misfortune of a
single day, if the fatal power of the imagination did not exaggerate the real measure of the
calamity. The loss of forty thousand Romans, who fell in the plains of Hadrianople, might have
been soon recruited in the populous provinces of the East, which contained so many millions of
inhabitants. The courage of a soldier is found to be the cheapest, and most common, quality of
human nature; and sufficient skill to encounter an undisciplined foe might have been speedily
taught by the care of the surviving centurions. If the Barbarians were mounted on the horses, and
equipped with the armor, of their vanquished enemies, the numerous studs of Cappadocia and
Spain would have supplied new squadrons of cavalry; the thirty-four arsenals of the empire were
plentifully stored with magazines of offensive and defensive arms: and the wealth of Asia might
still have yielded an ample fund for the expenses of the war. But the effects which were
produced by the battle of Hadrianople on the minds of the Barbarians and of the Romans,
extended the victory of the former, and the defeat of the latter, far beyond the limits of a single
day. A Gothic chief was heard to declare, with insolent moderation, that, for his own part, he
was fatigued with slaughter: but that he was astonished how a people, who fled before him like a
flock of sheep, could still presume to dispute the possession of their treasures and provinces.
The same terrors which the name of the Huns had spread among the Gothic tribes, were inspired,
by the formidable name of the Goths, among the subjects and soldiers of the Roman empire. If
Theodosius, hastily collecting his scattered forces, had led them into the field to encounter a
victorious enemy, his army would have been vanquished by their own fears; and his rashness
could not have been excused by the chance of success. But the great Theodosius, an epithet
which he honorably deserved on this momentous occasion, conducted himself as the firm and
faithful guardian of the republic. He fixed his head-quarters at Thessalonica, the capital of the
Macedonian diocese; from whence he could watch the irregular motions of the Barbarians, and
direct the operations of his lieutenants, from the gates of Constantinople to the shores of the
Hadriatic. The fortifications and garrisons of the cities were strengthened; and the troops, among
whom a sense of order and discipline was revived, were insensibly emboldened by the
confidence of their own safety. From these secure stations, they were encouraged to make
frequent sallies on the Barbarians, who infested the adjacent country; and, as they were seldom
allowed to engage, without some decisive superiority, either of ground or of numbers, their
enterprises were, for the most part, successful; and they were soon convinced, by their own
experience, of the possibility of vanquishing their invincible enemies. The detachments of these
separate garrisons were generally united into small armies; the same cautious measures were
pursued, according to an extensive and well-concerted plan of operations; the events of each day
added strength and spirit to the Roman arms; and the artful diligence of the emperor, who
circulated the most favorable reports of the success of the war, contributed to subdue the pride
of the Barbarians, and to animate the hopes and courage of his subjects. If, instead of this faint
and imperfect outline, we could accurately represent the counsels and actions of Theodosius, in
four successive campaigns, there is reason to believe, that his consummate skill would deserve
the applause of every military reader. The republic had formerly been saved by the delays of
Fabius; and, while the splendid trophies of Scipio, in the field of Zama, attract the eyes of
posterity, the camps and marches of the dictator among the hills of the Campania, may claim a
juster proportion of the solid and independent fame, which the general is not compelled to share,
either with fortune or with his troops. Such was likewise the merit of Theodosius; and the
infirmities of his body, which most unseasonably languished under a long and dangerous
disease, could not oppress the vigor of his mind, or divert his attention from the public service.
The deliverance and peace of the Roman provinces was the work of prudence, rather than of
valor: the prudence of Theodosius was seconded by fortune: and the emperor never failed to
seize, and to improve, every favorable circumstance. As long as the superior genius of Fritigern
preserved the union, and directed the motions of the Barbarians, their power was not inadequate
to the conquest of a great empire. The death of that hero, the predecessor and master of the
renowned Alaric, relieved an impatient multitude from the intolerable yoke of discipline and
discretion. The Barbarians, who had been restrained by his authority, abandoned themselves to
the dictates of their passions; and their passions were seldom uniform or consistent. An army of
conquerors was broken into many disorderly bands of savage robbers; and their blind and
irregular fury was not less pernicious to themselves, than to their enemies. Their mischievous
disposition was shown in the destruction of every object which they wanted strength to remove,
or taste to enjoy; and they often consumed, with improvident rage, the harvests, or the granaries,
which soon afterwards became necessary for their own subsistence. A spirit of discord arose
among the independent tribes and nations, which had been united only by the bands of a loose
and voluntary alliance. The troops of the Huns and the Alani would naturally upbraid the flight
of the Goths; who were not disposed to use with moderation the advantages of their fortune; the
ancient jealousy of the Ostrogoths and the Visigoths could not long be suspended; and the
haughty chiefs still remembered the insults and injuries, which they had reciprocally offered, or
sustained, while the nation was seated in the countries beyond the Danube. The progress of
domestic faction abated the more diffusive sentiment of national animosity; and the officers of
Theodosius were instructed to purchase, with liberal gifts and promises, the retreat or service of
the discontented party. The acquisition of Modar, a prince of the royal blood of the Amali, gave
a bold and faithful champion to the cause of Rome. The illustrious deserter soon obtained the
rank of master-general, with an important command; surprised an army of his countrymen, who
were immersed in wine and sleep; and, after a cruel slaughter of the astonished Goths, returned
with an immense spoil, and four thousand wagons, to the Imperial camp. In the hands of a
skilful politician, the most different means may be successfully applied to the same ends; and
the peace of the empire, which had been forwarded by the divisions, was accomplished by the
reunion, of the Gothic nation. Athanaric, who had been a patient spectator of these extraordinary
events, was at length driven, by the chance of arms, from the dark recesses of the woods of
Caucaland. He no longer hesitated to pass the Danube; and a very considerable part of the
subjects of Fritigern, who already felt the inconveniences of anarchy, were easily persuaded to
acknowledge for their king a Gothic Judge, whose birth they respected, and whose abilities they
had frequently experienced. But age had chilled the daring spirit of Athanaric; and, instead of
leading his people to the field of battle and victory, he wisely listened to the fair proposal of an
honorable and advantageous treaty. Theodosius, who was acquainted with the merit and power
of his new ally, condescended to meet him at the distance of several miles from Constantinople;
and entertained him in the Imperial city, with the confidence of a friend, and the magnificence of
a monarch. "The Barbarian prince observed, with curious attention, the variety of objects which
attracted his notice, and at last broke out into a sincere and passionate exclamation of wonder. I
now behold (said he) what I never could believe, the glories of this stupendous capital! And as
he cast his eyes around, he viewed, and he admired, the commanding situation of the city, the
strength and beauty of the walls and public edifices, the capacious harbor, crowded with
innumerable vessels, the perpetual concourse of distant nations, and the arms and discipline of
the troops. Indeed, (continued Athanaric,) the emperor of the Romans is a god upon earth; and
the presumptuous man, who dares to lift his hand against him, is guilty of his own blood." The
Gothic king did not long enjoy this splendid and honorable reception; and, as temperance was
not the virtue of his nation, it may justly be suspected, that his mortal disease was contracted
amidst the pleasures of the Imperial banquets. But the policy of Theodosius derived more solid
benefit from the death, than he could have expected from the most faithful services, of his ally.
The funeral of Athanaric was performed with solemn rites in the capital of the East; a stately
monument was erected to his memory; and his whole army, won by the liberal courtesy, and
decent grief, of Theodosius, enlisted under the standard of the Roman empire. The submission
of so great a body of the Visigoths was productive of the most salutary consequences; and the
mixed influence of force, of reason, and of corruption, became every day more powerful, and
more extensive. Each independent chieftain hastened to obtain a separate treaty, from the
apprehension that an obstinate delay might expose him, alone and unprotected, to the revenge,
or justice, of the conqueror. The general, or rather the final, capitulation of the Goths, may be
dated four years, one month, and twenty-five days, after the defeat and death of the emperor
Valens.
The provinces of the Danube had been already relieved from the oppressive weight of the
Gruthungi, or Ostrogoths, by the voluntary retreat of Alatheus and Saphrax, whose restless spirit
had prompted them to seek new scenes of rapine and glory. Their destructive course was pointed
towards the West; but we must be satisfied with a very obscure and imperfect knowledge of their
various adventures. The Ostrogoths impelled several of the German tribes on the provinces of
Gaul; concluded, and soon violated, a treaty with the emperor Gratian; advanced into the
unknown countries of the North; and, after an interval of more than four years, returned, with
accumulated force, to the banks of the Lower Danube. Their troops were recruited with the
fiercest warriors of Germany and Scythia; and the soldiers, or at least the historians, of the
empire, no longer recognized the name and countenances of their former enemies. The general
who commanded the military and naval powers of the Thracian frontier, soon perceived that his
superiority would be disadvantageous to the public service; and that the Barbarians, awed by the
presence of his fleet and legions, would probably defer the passage of the river till the
approaching winter. The dexterity of the spies, whom he sent into the Gothic camp, allured the
Barbarians into a fatal snare. They were persuaded that, by a bold attempt, they might surprise,
in the silence and darkness of the night, the sleeping army of the Romans; and the whole
multitude was hastily embarked in a fleet of three thousand canoes. The bravest of the
Ostrogoths led the van; the main body consisted of the remainder of their subjects and soldiers;
and the women and children securely followed in the rear. One of the nights without a moon had
been selected for the execution of their design; and they had almost reached the southern bank of
the Danube, in the firm confidence that they should find an easy landing and an unguarded
camp. But the progress of the Barbarians was suddenly stopped by an unexpected obstacle a
triple line of vessels, strongly connected with each other, and which formed an impenetrable
chain of two miles and a half along the river. While they struggled to force their way in the
unequal conflict, their right flank was overwhelmed by the irresistible attack of a fleet of galleys,
which were urged down the stream by the united impulse of oars and of the tide. The weight and
velocity of those ships of war broke, and sunk, and dispersed, the rude and feeble canoes of the
Barbarians; their valor was ineffectual; and Alatheus, the king, or general, of the Ostrogoths,
perished with his bravest troops, either by the sword of the Romans, or in the waves of the
Danube. The last division of this unfortunate fleet might regain the opposite shore; but the
distress and disorder of the multitude rendered them alike incapable, either of action or counsel;
and they soon implored the clemency of the victorious enemy. On this occasion, as well as on
many others, it is a difficult task to reconcile the passions and prejudices of the writers of the age
of Theodosius. The partial and malignant historian, who misrepresents every action of his reign,
affirms, that the emperor did not appear in the field of battle till the Barbarians had been
vanquished by the valor and conduct of his lieutenant Promotus. The flattering poet, who
celebrated, in the court of Honorius, the glory of the father and of the son, ascribes the victory to
the personal prowess of Theodosius; and almost insinuates, that the king of the Ostrogoths was
slain by the hand of the emperor. The truth of history might perhaps be found in a just medium
between these extreme and contradictory assertions.
The original treaty which fixed the settlement of the Goths, ascertained their privileges, and
stipulated their obligations, would illustrate the history of Theodosius and his successors. The
series of their history has imperfectly preserved the spirit and substance of this single agreement.
The ravages of war and tyranny had provided many large tracts of fertile but uncultivated land
for the use of those Barbarians who might not disdain the practice of agriculture. A numerous
colony of the Visigoths was seated in Thrace; the remains of the Ostrogoths were planted in
Phrygia and Lydia; their immediate wants were supplied by a distribution of corn and cattle; and
their future industry was encouraged by an exemption from tribute, during a certain term of
years. The Barbarians would have deserved to feel the cruel and perfidious policy of the Imperial
court, if they had suffered themselves to be dispersed through the provinces. They required, and
they obtained, the sole possession of the villages and districts assigned for their residence; they
still cherished and propagated their native manners and language; asserted, in the bosom of
despotism, the freedom of their domestic government; and acknowledged the sovereignty of the
emperor, without submitting to the inferior jurisdiction of the laws and magistrates of Rome.
The hereditary chiefs of the tribes and families were still permitted to command their followers
in peace and war; but the royal dignity was abolished; and the generals of the Goths were
appointed and removed at the pleasure of the emperor. An army of forty thousand Goths was
maintained for the perpetual service of the empire of the East; and those haughty troops, who
assumed the title of Fderati, or allies, were distinguished by their gold collars, liberal pay, and
licentious privileges. Their native courage was improved by the use of arms and the knowledge
of discipline; and, while the republic was guarded, or threatened, by the doubtful sword of the
Barbarians, the last sparks of the military flame were finally extinguished in the minds of the
Romans. Theodosius had the address to persuade his allies, that the conditions of peace, which
had been extorted from him by prudence and necessity, were the voluntary expressions of his
sincere friendship for the Gothic nation. A different mode of vindication or apology was
opposed to the complaints of the people; who loudly censured these shameful and dangerous
concessions. The calamities of the war were painted in the most lively colors; and the first
symptoms of the return of order, of plenty, and security, were diligently exaggerated. The
advocates of Theodosius could affirm, with some appearance of truth and reason, that it was
impossible to extirpate so many warlike tribes, who were rendered desperate by the loss of their
native country; and that the exhausted provinces would be revived by a fresh supply of soldiers
and husbandmen. The Barbarians still wore an angry and hostile aspect; but the experience of
past times might encourage the hope, that they would acquire the habits of industry and
obedience; that their manners would be polished by time, education, and the influence of
Christianity; and that their posterity would insensibly blend with the great body of the Roman
people.
Notwithstanding these specious arguments, and these sanguine expectations, it was apparent to
every discerning eye, that the Goths would long remain the enemies, and might soon become the
conquerors of the Roman empire. Their rude and insolent behavior expressed their contempt of
the citizens and provincials, whom they insulted with impunity. To the zeal and valor of the
Barbarians Theodosius was indebted for the success of his arms: but their assistance was
precarious; and they were sometimes seduced, by a treacherous and inconstant disposition, to
abandon his standard, at the moment when their service was the most essential. During the civil
war against Maximus, a great number of Gothic deserters retired into the morasses of
Macedonia, wasted the adjacent provinces, and obliged the intrepid monarch to expose his
person, and exert his power, to suppress the rising flame of rebellion. The public apprehensions
were fortified by the strong suspicion, that these tumults were not the effect of accidental
passion, but the result of deep and premeditated design. It was generally believed, that the Goths
had signed the treaty of peace with a hostile and insidious spirit; and that their chiefs had
previously bound themselves, by a solemn and secret oath, never to keep faith with the Romans;
to maintain the fairest show of loyalty and friendship, and to watch the favorable moment of
rapine, of conquest, and of revenge. But as the minds of the Barbarians were not insensible to
the power of gratitude, several of the Gothic leaders sincerely devoted themselves to the service
of the empire, or, at least, of the emperor; the whole nation was insensibly divided into two
opposite factions, and much sophistry was employed in conversation and dispute, to compare the
obligations of their first, and second, engagements. The Goths, who considered themselves as
the friends of peace, of justice, and of Rome, were directed by the authority of Fravitta, a valiant
and honorable youth, distinguished above the rest of his countrymen by the politeness of his
manners, the liberality of his sentiments, and the mild virtues of social life. But the more
numerous faction adhered to the fierce and faithless Priulf, * who inflamed the passions, and
asserted the independence, of his warlike followers. On one of the solemn festivals, when the
chiefs of both parties were invited to the Imperial table, they were insensibly heated by wine, till
they forgot the usual restraints of discretion and respect, and betrayed, in the presence of
Theodosius, the fatal secret of their domestic disputes. The emperor, who had been the reluctant
witness of this extraordinary controversy, dissembled his fears and resentment, and soon
dismissed the tumultuous assembly. Fravitta, alarmed and exasperated by the insolence of his
rival, whose departure from the palace might have been the signal of a civil war, boldly followed
him; and, drawing his sword, laid Priulf dead at his feet. Their companions flew to arms; and the
faithful champion of Rome would have been oppressed by superior numbers, if he had not been
protected by the seasonable interposition of the Imperial guards. Such were the scenes of
Barbaric rage, which disgraced the palace and table of the Roman emperor; and, as the impatient
Goths could only be restrained by the firm and temperate character of Theodosius, the public
safety seemed to depend on the life and abilities of a single man.
Vol. 2