<p><SPAN name="link482HCH0001" id="link482HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XLVIII: Succession And Characters Of The Greek Emperors.—Part I. </h2>
<p>Plan Of The Two Last Volumes.—Succession And Characters Of<br/>
The Greek Emperors Of Constantinople, From The Time Of<br/>
Heraclius To The Latin Conquest.<br/></p>
<p>I have now deduced from Trajan to Constantine, from Constantine to
Heraclius, the regular series of the Roman emperors; and faithfully
exposed the prosperous and adverse fortunes of their reigns. Five
centuries of the decline and fall of the empire have already elapsed; but
a period of more than eight hundred years still separates me from the term
of my labors, the taking of Constantinople by the Turks. Should I
persevere in the same course, should I observe the same measure, a prolix
and slender thread would be spun through many a volume, nor would the
patient reader find an adequate reward of instruction or amusement. At
every step, as we sink deeper in the decline and fall of the Eastern
empire, the annals of each succeeding reign would impose a more ungrateful
and melancholy task. These annals must continue to repeat a tedious and
uniform tale of weakness and misery; the natural connection of causes and
events would be broken by frequent and hasty transitions, and a minute
accumulation of circumstances must destroy the light and effect of those
general pictures which compose the use and ornament of a remote history.
From the time of Heraclius, the Byzantine theatre is contracted and
darkened: the line of empire, which had been defined by the laws of
Justinian and the arms of Belisarius, recedes on all sides from our view;
the Roman name, the proper subject of our inquiries, is reduced to a
narrow corner of Europe, to the lonely suburbs of Constantinople; and the
fate of the Greek empire has been compared to that of the Rhine, which
loses itself in the sands, before its waters can mingle with the ocean.
The scale of dominion is diminished to our view by the distance of time
and place; nor is the loss of external splendor compensated by the nobler
gifts of virtue and genius. In the last moments of her decay,
Constantinople was doubtless more opulent and populous than Athens at her
most flourishing aera, when a scanty sum of six thousand talents, or
twelve hundred thousand pounds sterling was possessed by twenty-one
thousand male citizens of an adult age. But each of these citizens was a
freeman, who dared to assert the liberty of his thoughts, words, and
actions, whose person and property were guarded by equal law; and who
exercised his independent vote in the government of the republic. Their
numbers seem to be multiplied by the strong and various discriminations of
character; under the shield of freedom, on the wings of emulation and
vanity, each Athenian aspired to the level of the national dignity; from
this commanding eminence, some chosen spirits soared beyond the reach of a
vulgar eye; and the chances of superior merit in a great and populous
kingdom, as they are proved by experience, would excuse the computation of
imaginary millions. The territories of Athens, Sparta, and their allies,
do not exceed a moderate province of France or England; but after the
trophies of Salamis and Platea, they expand in our fancy to the gigantic
size of Asia, which had been trampled under the feet of the victorious
Greeks. But the subjects of the Byzantine empire, who assume and dishonor
the names both of Greeks and Romans, present a dead uniformity of abject
vices, which are neither softened by the weakness of humanity, nor
animated by the vigor of memorable crimes. The freemen of antiquity might
repeat with generous enthusiasm the sentence of Homer, "that on the first
day of his servitude, the captive is deprived of one half of his manly
virtue." But the poet had only seen the effects of civil or domestic
slavery, nor could he foretell that the second moiety of manhood must be
annihilated by the spiritual despotism which shackles not only the
actions, but even the thoughts, of the prostrate votary. By this double
yoke, the Greeks were oppressed under the successors of Heraclius; the
tyrant, a law of eternal justice, was degraded by the vices of his
subjects; and on the throne, in the camp, in the schools, we search,
perhaps with fruitless diligence, the names and characters that may
deserve to be rescued from oblivion. Nor are the defects of the subject
compensated by the skill and variety of the painters. Of a space of eight
hundred years, the four first centuries are overspread with a cloud
interrupted by some faint and broken rays of historic light: in the lives
of the emperors, from Maurice to Alexius, Basil the Macedonian has alone
been the theme of a separate work; and the absence, or loss, or
imperfection of contemporary evidence, must be poorly supplied by the
doubtful authority of more recent compilers. The four last centuries are
exempt from the reproach of penury; and with the Comnenian family, the
historic muse of Constantinople again revives, but her apparel is gaudy,
her motions are without elegance or grace. A succession of priests, or
courtiers, treads in each other's footsteps in the same path of servitude
and superstition: their views are narrow, their judgment is feeble or
corrupt; and we close the volume of copious barrenness, still ignorant of
the causes of events, the characters of the actors, and the manners of the
times which they celebrate or deplore. The observation which has been
applied to a man, may be extended to a whole people, that the energy of
the sword is communicated to the pen; and it will be found by experience,
that the tone of history will rise or fall with the spirit of the age.</p>
<p>From these considerations, I should have abandoned without regret the
Greek slaves and their servile historians, had I not reflected that the
fate of the Byzantine monarchy is passively connected with the most
splendid and important revolutions which have changed the state of the
world. The space of the lost provinces was immediately replenished with
new colonies and rising kingdoms: the active virtues of peace and war
deserted from the vanquished to the victorious nations; and it is in their
origin and conquests, in their religion and government, that we must
explore the causes and effects of the decline and fall of the Eastern
empire. Nor will this scope of narrative, the riches and variety of these
materials, be incompatible with the unity of design and composition. As,
in his daily prayers, the Mussulman of Fez or Delhi still turns his face
towards the temple of Mecca, the historian's eye shall be always fixed on
the city of Constantinople. The excursive line may embrace the wilds of
Arabia and Tartary, but the circle will be ultimately reduced to the
decreasing limit of the Roman monarchy.</p>
<p>On this principle I shall now establish the plan of the last two volumes
of the present work. The first chapter will contain, in a regular series,
the emperors who reigned at Constantinople during a period of six hundred
years, from the days of Heraclius to the Latin conquest; a rapid abstract,
which may be supported by a general appeal to the order and text of the
original historians. In this introduction, I shall confine myself to the
revolutions of the throne, the succession of families, the personal
characters of the Greek princes, the mode of their life and death, the
maxims and influence of their domestic government, and the tendency of
their reign to accelerate or suspend the downfall of the Eastern empire.
Such a chronological review will serve to illustrate the various argument
of the subsequent chapters; and each circumstance of the eventful story of
the Barbarians will adapt itself in a proper place to the Byzantine
annals. The internal state of the empire, and the dangerous heresy of the
Paulicians, which shook the East and enlightened the West, will be the
subject of two separate chapters; but these inquiries must be postponed
till our further progress shall have opened the view of the world in the
ninth and tenth centuries of the Christian area. After this foundation of
Byzantine history, the following nations will pass before our eyes, and
each will occupy the space to which it may be entitled by greatness or
merit, or the degree of connection with the Roman world and the present
age. I. The Franks; a general appellation which includes all the
Barbarians of France, Italy, and Germany, who were united by the sword and
sceptre of Charlemagne. The persecution of images and their votaries
separated Rome and Italy from the Byzantine throne, and prepared the
restoration of the Roman empire in the West. II. The Arabs or Saracens.
Three ample chapters will be devoted to this curious and interesting
object. In the first, after a picture of the country and its inhabitants,
I shall investigate the character of Mahomet; the character, religion, and
success of the prophet. In the second, I shall lead the Arabs to the
conquest of Syria, Egypt, and Africa, the provinces of the Roman empire;
nor can I check their victorious career till they have overthrown the
monarchies of Persia and Spain. In the third, I shall inquire how
Constantinople and Europe were saved by the luxury and arts, the division
and decay, of the empire of the caliphs. A single chapter will include,
III. The Bulgarians, IV. Hungarians, and, V. Russians, who assaulted by
sea or by land the provinces and the capital; but the last of these, so
important in their present greatness, will excite some curiosity in their
origin and infancy. VI. The Normans; or rather the private adventurers of
that warlike people, who founded a powerful kingdom in Apulia and Sicily,
shook the throne of Constantinople, displayed the trophies of chivalry,
and almost realized the wonders of romance.</p>
<p>VII. The Latins; the subjects of the pope, the nations of the West, who
enlisted under the banner of the cross for the recovery or relief of the
holy sepulchre. The Greek emperors were terrified and preserved by the
myriads of pilgrims who marched to Jerusalem with Godfrey of Bouillon and
the peers of Christendom. The second and third crusades trod in the
footsteps of the first: Asia and Europe were mingled in a sacred war of
two hundred years; and the Christian powers were bravely resisted, and
finally expelled by Saladin and the Mamelukes of Egypt. In these memorable
crusades, a fleet and army of French and Venetians were diverted from
Syria to the Thracian Bosphorus: they assaulted the capital, they
subverted the Greek monarchy: and a dynasty of Latin princes was seated
near threescore years on the throne of Constantine. VII. The Greeks
themselves, during this period of captivity and exile, must be considered
as a foreign nation; the enemies, and again the sovereigns of
Constantinople. Misfortune had rekindled a spark of national virtue; and
the Imperial series may be continued with some dignity from their
restoration to the Turkish conquest. IX. The Moguls and Tartars. By the
arms of Zingis and his descendants, the globe was shaken from China to
Poland and Greece: the sultans were overthrown: the caliphs fell, and the
Caesars trembled on their throne. The victories of Timour suspended above
fifty years the final ruin of the Byzantine empire. X. I have already
noticed the first appearance of the Turks; and the names of the fathers,
of Seljuk and Othman, discriminate the two successive dynasties of the
nation, which emerged in the eleventh century from the Scythian
wilderness. The former established a splendid and potent kingdom from the
banks of the Oxus to Antioch and Nice; and the first crusade was provoked
by the violation of Jerusalem and the danger of Constantinople. From an
humble origin, the Ottomans arose, the scourge and terror of Christendom.
Constantinople was besieged and taken by Mahomet II., and his triumph
annihilates the remnant, the image, the title, of the Roman empire in the
East. The schism of the Greeks will be connected with their last
calamities, and the restoration of learning in the Western world.</p>
<p>I shall return from the captivity of the new, to the ruins of ancient
Rome; and the venerable name, the interesting theme, will shed a ray of
glory on the conclusion of my labors.</p>
<p>The emperor Heraclius had punished a tyrant and ascended his throne; and
the memory of his reign is perpetuated by the transient conquest, and
irreparable loss, of the Eastern provinces. After the death of Eudocia,
his first wife, he disobeyed the patriarch, and violated the laws, by his
second marriage with his niece Martina; and the superstition of the Greeks
beheld the judgment of Heaven in the diseases of the father and the
deformity of his offspring. But the opinion of an illegitimate birth is
sufficient to distract the choice, and loosen the obedience, of the
people: the ambition of Martina was quickened by maternal love, and
perhaps by the envy of a step-mother; and the aged husband was too feeble
to withstand the arts of conjugal allurements. Constantine, his eldest
son, enjoyed in a mature age the title of Augustus; but the weakness of
his constitution required a colleague and a guardian, and he yielded with
secret reluctance to the partition of the empire. The senate was summoned
to the palace to ratify or attest the association of Heracleonas, the son
of Martina: the imposition of the diadem was consecrated by the prayer and
blessing of the patriarch; the senators and patricians adored the majesty
of the great emperor and the partners of his reign; and as soon as the
doors were thrown open, they were hailed by the tumultuary but important
voice of the soldiers. After an interval of five months, the pompous
ceremonies which formed the essence of the Byzantine state were celebrated
in the cathedral and the hippodrome; the concord of the royal brothers was
affectedly displayed by the younger leaning on the arm of the elder; and
the name of Martina was mingled in the reluctant or venal acclamations of
the people. Heraclius survived this association about two years: his last
testimony declared his two sons the equal heirs of the Eastern empire, and
commanded them to honor his widow Martina as their mother and their
sovereign.</p>
<p>When Martina first appeared on the throne with the name and attributes of
royalty, she was checked by a firm, though respectful, opposition; and the
dying embers of freedom were kindled by the breath of superstitious
prejudice. "We reverence," exclaimed the voice of a citizen, "we reverence
the mother of our princes; but to those princes alone our obedience is
due; and Constantine, the elder emperor, is of an age to sustain, in his
own hands, the weight of the sceptre. Your sex is excluded by nature from
the toils of government. How could you combat, how could you answer, the
Barbarians, who, with hostile or friendly intentions, may approach the
royal city? May Heaven avert from the Roman republic this national
disgrace, which would provoke the patience of the slaves of Persia!"
Martina descended from the throne with indignation, and sought a refuge in
the female apartment of the palace. The reign of Constantine the Third
lasted only one hundred and three days: he expired in the thirtieth year
of his age, and, although his life had been a long malady, a belief was
entertained that poison had been the means, and his cruel step-mother the
author, of his untimely fate. Martina reaped indeed the harvest of his
death, and assumed the government in the name of the surviving emperor;
but the incestuous widow of Heraclius was universally abhorred; the
jealousy of the people was awakened, and the two orphans whom Constantine
had left became the objects of the public care. It was in vain that the
son of Martina, who was no more than fifteen years of age, was taught to
declare himself the guardian of his nephews, one of whom he had presented
at the baptismal font: it was in vain that he swore on the wood of the
true cross, to defend them against all their enemies. On his death-bed,
the late emperor had despatched a trusty servant to arm the troops and
provinces of the East in the defence of his helpless children: the
eloquence and liberality of Valentin had been successful, and from his
camp of Chalcedon, he boldly demanded the punishment of the assassins, and
the restoration of the lawful heir. The license of the soldiers, who
devoured the grapes and drank the wine of their Asiatic vineyards,
provoked the citizens of Constantinople against the domestic authors of
their calamities, and the dome of St. Sophia reechoed, not with prayers
and hymns, but with the clamors and imprecations of an enraged multitude.
At their imperious command, Heracleonas appeared in the pulpit with the
eldest of the royal orphans; Constans alone was saluted as emperor of the
Romans, and a crown of gold, which had been taken from the tomb of
Heraclius, was placed on his head, with the solemn benediction of the
patriarch.</p>
<p>But in the tumult of joy and indignation, the church was pillaged, the
sanctuary was polluted by a promiscuous crowd of Jews and Barbarians; and
the Monothelite Pyrrhus, a creature of the empress, after dropping a
protestation on the altar, escaped by a prudent flight from the zeal of
the Catholics. A more serious and bloody task was reserved for the senate,
who derived a temporary strength from the consent of the soldiers and
people.</p>
<p>The spirit of Roman freedom revived the ancient and awful examples of the
judgment of tyrants, and the Imperial culprits were deposed and condemned
as the authors of the death of Constantine. But the severity of the
conscript fathers was stained by the indiscriminate punishment of the
innocent and the guilty: Martina and Heracleonas were sentenced to the
amputation, the former of her tongue, the latter of his nose; and after
this cruel execution, they consumed the remainder of their days in exile
and oblivion. The Greeks who were capable of reflection might find some
consolation for their servitude, by observing the abuse of power when it
was lodged for a moment in the hands of an aristocracy.</p>
<p>We shall imagine ourselves transported five hundred years backwards to the
age of the Antonines, if we listen to the oration which Constans II.
pronounced in the twelfth year of his age before the Byzantine senate.
After returning his thanks for the just punishment of the assassins, who
had intercepted the fairest hopes of his father's reign, "By the divine
Providence," said the young emperor, "and by your righteous decree,
Martina and her incestuous progeny have been cast headlong from the
throne. Your majesty and wisdom have prevented the Roman state from
degenerating into lawless tyranny. I therefore exhort and beseech you to
stand forth as the counsellors and judges of the common safety." The
senators were gratified by the respectful address and liberal donative of
their sovereign; but these servile Greeks were unworthy and regardless of
freedom; and in his mind, the lesson of an hour was quickly erased by the
prejudices of the age and the habits of despotism. He retained only a
jealous fear lest the senate or people should one day invade the right of
primogeniture, and seat his brother Theodosius on an equal throne. By the
imposition of holy orders, the grandson of Heraclius was disqualified for
the purple; but this ceremony, which seemed to profane the sacraments of
the church, was insufficient to appease the suspicions of the tyrant, and
the death of the deacon Theodosius could alone expiate the crime of his
royal birth. <SPAN href="#link48note-1111" name="link48noteref-1111" id="link48noteref-1111">1111</SPAN> His murder was avenged by the
imprecations of the people, and the assassin, in the fullness of power,
was driven from his capital into voluntary and perpetual exile. Constans
embarked for Greece and, as if he meant to retort the abhorrence which he
deserved he is said, from the Imperial galley, to have spit against the
walls of his native city. After passing the winter at Athens, he sailed to
Tarentum in Italy, visited Rome, <SPAN href="#link48note-1112"
name="link48noteref-1112" id="link48noteref-1112">1112</SPAN> and concluded a
long pilgrimage of disgrace and sacrilegious rapine, by fixing his
residence at Syracuse. But if Constans could fly from his people, he could
not fly from himself. The remorse of his conscience created a phantom who
pursued him by land and sea, by day and by night; and the visionary
Theodosius, presenting to his lips a cup of blood, said, or seemed to say,
"Drink, brother, drink;" a sure emblem of the aggravation of his guilt,
since he had received from the hands of the deacon the mystic cup of the
blood of Christ. Odious to himself and to mankind, Constans perished by
domestic, perhaps by episcopal, treason, in the capital of Sicily. A
servant who waited in the bath, after pouring warm water on his head,
struck him violently with the vase. He fell, stunned by the blow, and
suffocated by the water; and his attendants, who wondered at the tedious
delay, beheld with indifference the corpse of their lifeless emperor. The
troops of Sicily invested with the purple an obscure youth, whose
inimitable beauty eluded, and it might easily elude, the declining art of
the painters and sculptors of the age.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link48note-1111" id="link48note-1111">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
1111 (<SPAN href="#link48noteref-1111">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ His soldiers
(according to Abulfaradji. Chron. Syr. p. 112) called him another Cain.
St. Martin, t. xi. p. 379.—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link48note-1112" id="link48note-1112">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
1112 (<SPAN href="#link48noteref-1112">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ He was received in
Rome, and pillaged the churches. He carried off the brass roof of the
Pantheon to Syracuse, or, as Schlosser conceives, to Constantinople
Schlosser Geschichte der bilder-sturmenden Kaiser p. 80—M.]</p>
<p>Constans had left in the Byzantine palace three sons, the eldest of whom
had been clothed in his infancy with the purple. When the father summoned
them to attend his person in Sicily, these precious hostages were detained
by the Greeks, and a firm refusal informed him that they were the children
of the state. The news of his murder was conveyed with almost supernatural
speed from Syracuse to Constantinople; and Constantine, the eldest of his
sons, inherited his throne without being the heir of the public hatred.
His subjects contributed, with zeal and alacrity, to chastise the guilt
and presumption of a province which had usurped the rights of the senate
and people; the young emperor sailed from the Hellespont with a powerful
fleet; and the legions of Rome and Carthage were assembled under his
standard in the harbor of Syracuse. The defeat of the Sicilian tyrant was
easy, his punishment just, and his beauteous head was exposed in the
hippodrome: but I cannot applaud the clemency of a prince, who, among a
crowd of victims, condemned the son of a patrician, for deploring with
some bitterness the execution of a virtuous father. The youth was
castrated: he survived the operation, and the memory of this indecent
cruelty is preserved by the elevation of Germanus to the rank of a
patriarch and saint. After pouring this bloody libation on his father's
tomb, Constantine returned to his capital; and the growth of his young
beard during the Sicilian voyage was announced, by the familiar surname of
Pogonatus, to the Grecian world. But his reign, like that of his
predecessor, was stained with fraternal discord. On his two brothers,
Heraclius and Tiberius, he had bestowed the title of Augustus; an empty
title, for they continued to languish, without trust or power, in the
solitude of the palace. At their secret instigation, the troops of the
Anatolian theme or province approached the city on the Asiatic side,
demanded for the royal brothers the partition or exercise of sovereignty,
and supported their seditious claim by a theological argument. They were
Christians, (they cried,) and orthodox Catholics; the sincere votaries of
the holy and undivided Trinity. Since there are three equal persons in
heaven, it is reasonable there should be three equal persons upon earth.
The emperor invited these learned divines to a friendly conference, in
which they might propose their arguments to the senate: they obeyed the
summons, but the prospect of their bodies hanging on the gibbet in the
suburb of Galata reconciled their companions to the unity of the reign of
Constantine. He pardoned his brothers, and their names were still
pronounced in the public acclamations: but on the repetition or suspicion
of a similar offence, the obnoxious princes were deprived of their titles
and noses, <SPAN href="#link48note-1113" name="link48noteref-1113" id="link48noteref-1113">1113</SPAN> in the presence of the Catholic bishops
who were assembled at Constantinople in the sixth general synod. In the
close of his life, Pogonatus was anxious only to establish the right of
primogeniture: the heir of his two sons, Justinian and Heraclius, was
offered on the shrine of St. Peter, as a symbol of their spiritual
adoption by the pope; but the elder was alone exalted to the rank of
Augustus, and the assurance of the empire.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link48note-1113" id="link48note-1113">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
1113 (<SPAN href="#link48noteref-1113">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Schlosser
(Geschichte der bilder sturmenden Kaiser, p. 90) supposed that the young
princes were mutilated after the first insurrection; that after this the
acts were still inscribed with their names, the princes being closely
secluded in the palace. The improbability of this circumstance may be
weighed against Gibbon's want of authority for his statement.—M.]</p>
<p>After the decease of his father, the inheritance of the Roman world
devolved to Justinian II.; and the name of a triumphant lawgiver was
dishonored by the vices of a boy, who imitated his namesake only in the
expensive luxury of building. His passions were strong; his understanding
was feeble; and he was intoxicated with a foolish pride, that his birth
had given him the command of millions, of whom the smallest community
would not have chosen him for their local magistrate. His favorite
ministers were two beings the least susceptible of human sympathy, a
eunuch and a monk: to the one he abandoned the palace, to the other the
finances; the former corrected the emperor's mother with a scourge, the
latter suspended the insolvent tributaries, with their heads downwards,
over a slow and smoky fire. Since the days of Commodus and Caracalla, the
cruelty of the Roman princes had most commonly been the effect of their
fear; but Justinian, who possessed some vigor of character, enjoyed the
sufferings, and braved the revenge, of his subjects, about ten years, till
the measure was full, of his crimes and of their patience. In a dark
dungeon, Leontius, a general of reputation, had groaned above three years,
with some of the noblest and most deserving of the patricians: he was
suddenly drawn forth to assume the government of Greece; and this
promotion of an injured man was a mark of the contempt rather than of the
confidence of his prince. As he was followed to the port by the kind
offices of his friends, Leontius observed, with a sigh, that he was a
victim adorned for sacrifice, and that inevitable death would pursue his
footsteps. They ventured to reply, that glory and empire might be the
recompense of a generous resolution; that every order of men abhorred the
reign of a monster; and that the hands of two hundred thousand patriots
expected only the voice of a leader. The night was chosen for their
deliverance; and in the first effort of the conspirators, the praefect was
slain, and the prisons were forced open: the emissaries of Leontius
proclaimed in every street, "Christians, to St. Sophia!" and the
seasonable text of the patriarch, "This is the day of the Lord!" was the
prelude of an inflammatory sermon. From the church the people adjourned to
the hippodrome: Justinian, in whose cause not a sword had been drawn, was
dragged before these tumultuary judges, and their clamors demanded the
instant death of the tyrant. But Leontius, who was already clothed with
the purple, cast an eye of pity on the prostrate son of his own benefactor
and of so many emperors. The life of Justinian was spared; the amputation
of his nose, perhaps of his tongue, was imperfectly performed: the happy
flexibility of the Greek language could impose the name of Rhinotmetus;
and the mutilated tyrant was banished to Chersonae in Crim-Tartary, a
lonely settlement, where corn, wine, and oil, were imported as foreign
luxuries.</p>
<p>On the edge of the Scythian wilderness, Justinian still cherished the
pride of his birth, and the hope of his restoration. After three years'
exile, he received the pleasing intelligence that his injury was avenged
by a second revolution, and that Leontius in his turn had been dethroned
and mutilated by the rebel Apsimar, who assumed the more respectable name
of Tiberius. But the claim of lineal succession was still formidable to a
plebeian usurper; and his jealousy was stimulated by the complaints and
charges of the Chersonites, who beheld the vices of the tyrant in the
spirit of the exile. With a band of followers, attached to his person by
common hope or common despair, Justinian fled from the inhospitable shore
to the horde of the Chozars, who pitched their tents between the Tanais
and Borysthenes. The khan entertained with pity and respect the royal
suppliant: Phanagoria, once an opulent city, on the Asiatic side of the
lake Moeotis, was assigned for his residence; and every Roman prejudice
was stifled in his marriage with the sister of the Barbarian, who seems,
however, from the name of Theodora, to have received the sacrament of
baptism. But the faithless Chozar was soon tempted by the gold of
Constantinople: and had not the design been revealed by the conjugal love
of Theodora, her husband must have been assassinated or betrayed into the
power of his enemies. After strangling, with his own hands, the two
emissaries of the khan, Justinian sent back his wife to her brother, and
embarked on the Euxine in search of new and more faithful allies. His
vessel was assaulted by a violent tempest; and one of his pious companions
advised him to deserve the mercy of God by a vow of general forgiveness,
if he should be restored to the throne. "Of forgiveness?" replied the
intrepid tyrant: "may I perish this instant—may the Almighty whelm
me in the waves—if I consent to spare a single head of my enemies!"
He survived this impious menace, sailed into the mouth of the Danube,
trusted his person in the royal village of the Bulgarians, and purchased
the aid of Terbelis, a pagan conqueror, by the promise of his daughter and
a fair partition of the treasures of the empire. The Bulgarian kingdom
extended to the confines of Thrace; and the two princes besieged
Constantinople at the head of fifteen thousand horse. Apsimar was dismayed
by the sudden and hostile apparition of his rival whose head had been
promised by the Chozar, and of whose evasion he was yet ignorant. After an
absence of ten years, the crimes of Justinian were faintly remembered, and
the birth and misfortunes of their hereditary sovereign excited the pity
of the multitude, ever discontented with the ruling powers; and by the
active diligence of his adherents, he was introduced into the city and
palace of Constantine.</p>
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