Authors: Ross Laidlaw
âI rather think they'll soon have more urgent matters to occupy their minds,' said Cyril wearily. âAs will we all. I therefore bring this meeting to
a close, and hope to see you all again when, God willing, the pestilence shall have run its course.'
In the summer of that year,
*
the plague leapt across the Bosphorus and battened on the capital. In the maze of close-packed houses, especially the poorer quarters, it spread like wildfire seemingly through contagion, the appearance of the swellings usually amounting to a death-sentence. The symptoms were invariably the same, and most of those infected died in agony within a few days, or even on the same day that the symptoms manifested themselves.
The death-rate escalated swiftly â from five thousand in a day, to ten thousand, to sixteen thousand on the worst day of all. Disposal of the dead became a nigh-insuperable problem. To deal with this distasteful task, Justinian appointed an imperial private secretary named Theodore. Theodore's solution was to dig vast burial pits at the suburb of Sykae across the Golden Horn. But so relentless was the torrent of fresh corpses that these rapidly filled up; in desperation, Theodore then resorted to pulling off the roofs of the towers of the suburb's walls, and filling them with the dead. In consequence, whenever the wind blew from the north, an appalling stench from Sykae pervaded Constantinople, whose inhabitants cowered in their houses, too terrified to venture out in case they caught the plague. Countless homes throughout the city became charnel houses, in which their dead inmates lay rotting for lack of anyone brave enough to bury them.
And then, just when it seemed that things could get no worse, the emperor himself became infected by the plague. Justinian was hardly popular. Many recalled with bitterness the harsh government policies which had provoked the Nika riots, and the brutality with which these had been suppressed. And the tax burden to sustain the wars in Africa, Italy, and Persia had borne heavily on almost everyone. But as Roman emperor, who was also Christ's vicegerent upon earth, he was seen by Roman citizens as their champion against the forces of evil and barbarism that constituted an ever-present threat to the survival of the Empire. In allowing the pestilence to strike down their emperor, had God withdrawn His favour from the Romans? And if this could happen to Justinian, the highest in the land, then what hope was there for anyone? If scent could be an attribute of prayer, then the odour of the orisons arising for the safety of their emperor would have overwhelmed the stink of rotting corpses from across the Golden Horn.
With Justinian confined to a sick-bed and expected to succumb, to Theodora devolved the running of the Roman world. A woman distracted by grief over the death of a lover she adored, concerned for a husband gravely ill, and inexperienced in the conduct of high politics, now found herself in charge of an empire extending from Atlantic to Euphrates, from the Alps to Aethiopia, and numbering (prior to the pestilence) perhaps a hundred million souls.
From Procopius Caesariensis, Chronicler, to Anicius Julianus, Senator, greetings.
Dear âCato', friend in
Libertas
, although I have heard nothing from you in all the time since Ravenna fell to Belisarius (ending what has turned out to be only the first phase of the Gothic War), I allow myself to hope and trust a) that you are safe and in good health, and b) that I may soon hear from you again in your capacity of head of
Libertas
, now that Totila is sweeping all before him. Assuming both will prove to be the case, I shall inform you of those matters relevant to the Cause which I am competent to comment on that have transpired since last we corresponded. Much of what I have to tell you I daresay you'll have heard about already, but to insure against lacunae I shall omit nothing of substance.
Justinian unfortunately did not die (his death from pestilence would have made
Libertas
virtually redundant!), but during the months that he was sick Theodora, bless her, inadvertently gave our Cause a tremendous boost. How? By emasculating Belisarius, the one man who could have stopped Totila! (The plague having spread to Persia, Khusro suspended hostilities with Rome, thus ending the need for B's presence on that front.) Allow me to elucidate.
As very few recover from plague (this visitation is estimated to have killed 300,000 in Constantinople alone â a third of the capital) everyone assumed Justinian was going to die. So it was only common sense on Belisarius' part, as one of the Empire's movers and shakers, to plan ahead against developments arising from the emperor's demise. Having (quite rightly) little faith that Theodora would make a sensible choice of successor, he let it be known that the appointment of an emperor could only happen with the concurrence of himself and the army commanders â otherwise there would be a very real risk of civil war. Of course Theodora, the silly bitch, who can only ever see things from a
personal
point of view,
construed this as an insult and proceeded to confiscate B's fortune, dismiss his corps of personal retainers, and all but have him flung in gaol (which is what she did to poor old Buzes, B's second-in-command).
Even after he turned the corner healthwise, Justinian had to convalesce and let Theodora carry on as regent. With Belisarius available but in disgrace, the emperor, lacking the guts to contravene Theodora, was forced to send his original choice, Maximinus, to Italy in order to sort out Totila. Well, although a disaster for Justinian, Maximinus proved a perfect gift for us. An indecisive ditherer, he let Totila run rings round him, allowing the Goths to capture Naples, thus giving Totila a port and power-base of immense strategic value for the whole of southern Italy.
By this time, Justinian had recovered sufficiently to take up the reins of power once again. Finding at last the courage to override Theodora, he reinstated Belisarius (much to the empress' chagrin), recalled the hapless Maximinus, and despatched B. (with yours truly in tow) to Ravenna to try to rectify the situation in Italy. Predictably, our wise and far-sighted emperor had neglected to provide the general with sufficient troops or supplies to achieve anything, forcing B. to appeal to J. for reinforcements, and to the Romans to abandon their allegiance to Totila and come over to his side. A plea which, in view of the âbenefits' conferred by Roman reoccupation, needless to say fell on deaf ears. While B. cooled his heels waiting for reinforcements to arrive, Totila was able to take the last few fortresses in central Italy and go on to besiege Rome itself.
Meanwhile, you'll be interested to know, while my superior was fuming impotently in Ravenna, I contrived to stir things up in Africa again. Via my contacts in the diocese, I persuaded Guntarith â a Roman general of Vandal origins (whose troops, surprise, surprise, were in arrears of pay) â to combine with rebel Moorish chiefs to mount an insurrection against Roman rule. Knowing you'll honour my pledge when you resume command of
Libertas
, I took the liberty of promising to back any revolt with funds. I'm pleased to say they took me at my word, with the result that Artabanus,
Magister Militum
in Africa, now has his hands full with mutinying soldiery and Moorish insurgents. As for the war in Italy, I'll spare you the details â a dreary catalogue of sieges, counter-sieges, sorties, and
manoeuvrings, the consequence of Belisarius taking to the field again as a result of his long-awaited reinforcements eventually arriving. Suffice to say that the campaign is taking a terrible toll on the civilian population and the land itself, with many areas reverting to uncultivated waste, and starvation becoming endemic. (The plus side of all this misery, from our point of view, is that it's fast turning Justinian into a hate figure.)
I've saved the best till last. Again, as a result of promises of payment on my part, via contacts inside Rome, I persuaded a unit of Isaurian soldiers (minus pay, as usual) to open the Porta Asinaria.
*
In rushed the Goths and, I'm pleased to report, the Eternal City is now in Totila's hands.
In full confidence that I will hear from you ere long, I shall leave this at our old collection-point at Cecilia Metella on the Via Appia, for your
agens
to pick up. (This, I imagine, is what you would expect me to do, assuming me to be in the vicinity of Rome with Belisarius.) Vale.
Written at Portus
**
XIII Kalendas Januarii, in the year from the Founding of New Rome the two hundred and seventeenth.
â
Post Scriptum
My cover, by the way, seems rock-solid. At the height of his sickness, I was summoned by the emperor who told me that he wished to reward those who had stood by him at moments of crisis. (I suppose he was thinking â ha! ha! â of my âservices' during the Nika affair.) He said (speaking in a dreadful croaking whisper) that after the war, when my services as official historian could be relinquished, he would make me Prefect of Constantinople. Or, should he die, he had left instructions as to my promotion. I confess that I was touched, also that I felt almost sorry for the old fox to see him lying there â a wasted skeleton, like one of those hideous things in the catacombs of Rome. I was also, being in close proximity to one of its victims, absolutely terrified of catching the plague. But you can't ignore an imperial command. Theodora too (who, to her credit, had nursed him faithfully throughout his sickness) looked at death's door â hollow-eyed and ravaged from worry, also lack of
sleep â and, this is just guesswork on my part, perhaps some hidden malady that was sapping her constitution.
From Anicius Julianus, Senator, to Procopius Caesariensis, Chronicler, Ave.
Dear âRegulus', most loyal, courageous, and efficient of colleagues, I write in haste, a) to thank you for your sterling efforts on behalf of
Libertas
, b) alas, to inform you that
Libertas
itself is now dissolved, and c) to warn you to destroy instanter any correspondence relating to our Cause. My cover, as they say, is âblown'. Justinian's
agentes
have at last caught up with me, and I am ordered to report to the monastery of Saint Catherine on Mount Sinai, there to do penance for my âtreason' for the remainder of my days. I am as sure as I can be that your connection with
Libertas
is at present unsuspected and will probably remain so, provided you are circumspect.
Before the net closed in on me (and my senior lieutenants), I was able to honour the pledges you had made to our friends in Africa and Rome. Good Fortune attend you always. We may have failed, but at least we struck a blow for Roman values. Vale.
Written at Ancona, Nones Februarii, A.R.U.C., the two hundred and eighteenth.
*
Post Scriptum
We shall not meet again, dear friend. The climate on Mount Sinai I suspect I'd find most disagreeable, and the monastic life insufferably tedious. So, in the best Roman tradition, I intend to open my veins in the bath (no doubt while reading some uplifting stanzas of Horace or Catullus).
*
542.
*
The Asinarian Gate was opened on 17 December 546.
**
Now Porto, at the mouth of the Tiber.
â
20 December 546.
*
5 February 547.
There are two natures of Christ united in respect of His one hypostasis
*
Leontius of Jerusalem,
Against the Monophysites
, 532
The triple calamity of pestilence, the phenomenon that was Totila, and insurgency in Africa had put on hold that other aspect of Justinian's Grand Plan â the establishment of religious uniformity throughout the Empire. But, with Belisarius now back in Italy, thanks to the resumption of (no doubt temporary) Eternal Peace with Persia,
**
General John âthe Troglite' â Anastasius' successor â beginning to turn the tide of insurrection in Africa, and the plague having spent itself, the now fully recovered emperor looked forward with relish to confronting the challenge (thus far unresolved) of bridging the gulf between the rival creeds of Chalcedonian Orthodoxy and Monophysitism.
In his mind, Justinian reviewed the field of battle as it looked at present. The successful machinations of Theodora and Antonina had secured the throne of Peter for Vigilius, a Monophysite sympathiser,
â
thus âplanting' a potentially heretical pontiff in the ultra-Chalcedonian West! In the East, apart from Constantinople (where the Patriarch, Menas, was staunchly Chalcedonian), much of the Empire, especially the wealthy and important dioceses of Egypt and Oriens, the latter comprising Syria and Palestine, were passionately Monophysite. To an emperor more cynical and less idealistic than Justinian (a man, say, of Khusro's stamp), this potentially schismatic situation might have been shrugged off â a tiresome but essentially unimportant dichotomy. But Justinian was no cynic, and he was nothing if not idealistic. If the situation were allowed to drift, the Empire, in his opinion, was in danger of splitting into two mutually irreconcilable camps. It was his duty, as both emperor and Christ's vicegerent upon earth, to ensure this did not happen. To help him in his search for a solution, he sent for Theodore
Ascidas, Metropolitan of Caesarea, an ambitious, worldly, and intelligent cleric, who loved nothing better than the cut-and-thrust of intellectual debate . . .
âYou're in a fix, Serenity,' chuckled Ascidas, pouring himself a chaliceful of communion wine from the flagon on the altar. The two men were in Saint Irene's in the capital, consecrated a dozen years before. âIn Africa and Italy,' went on the bishop, a well-fleshed individual with a pleasant, lived-in face, ââ especially Italy, what with Totila making things hard for Belisarius, you can't afford not to keep the Romans on side. Not if you hope to hold the West, once you've reconquered it â again. And to
keep
those West Romans on side, you've got to be seen to be the champion of Chalcedonian Orthodoxy. For which you absolutely have to have the support of the Roman Church establishment, an institution that has largely filled the power-vacuum created by the absence of a Western emperor. Let the Romans of the West suspect you for a moment of going soft on the Monophysites â' Ascidas took a swig from the jewelled, silver cup and beamed at the emperor. âThen your credibility's gone. I trust I'm making myself clear, Serenity.'