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Distress of
Heraclius,

A.D 610-622.

At the time when this prediction is said to have been delivered, no prophecy could be more distant from its accomplishment, since the first twelve years of Heraclius announced the approaching dissolution of the empire. If the motives of Chosroes had been pure and honourable, he must have ended the quarrel with the death of Phocas, and he would have embraced, as his best ally, the fortunate African who had so generously avenged the injuries of his benefactor Maurice. The prosecution of the war revealed the true character of the barbarian; and the suppliant embassies of Heraclius to beseech his clemency, that he would spare the innocent, accept a tribute, and give peace to the world, were rejected with contemptuous silence or insolent menace. Syria, Egypt, and the provinces of Asia were subdued by the Persian arms; while Europe, from the confines of Istria to the long wall of Thrace, was oppressed by the Avars, unsatiated with the blood and rapine of the Italian war. They had coolly massacred their male captives in the sacred field of Pannonia; the women and children were reduced to servitude, and the noblest virgins were abandoned to the promiscuous lust of the barbarians. The amorous matron who opened the gates of Friuli passed a short night in the arms of her royal lover; the next evening Romilda was condemned to the embraces of twelve Avars; and, the third day, the Lombard princess was impaled in the sight of the camp, while the chagan observed, with a cruel smile, that such a husband was the fit recompence of her lewdness and perfidy.TO By these implacable enemies Heraclius, on either side, was insulted and besieged: and the Roman empire was reduced to the walls of Constantinople, with the remnant of Greece, Italy, and Africa, and some maritime cities, from Tyre to Trebizond, of the Asiatic coast. After the loss of Egypt the capital was afflicted by famine and pestilence; and the emperor, incapable of resistance and hopeless of relief, had resolved to transfer his person and government to the more secure residence of Carthage. His ships were already laden with the treasures of the palace; but his flight was arrested by the patriarch, who armed the powers of religion in the defence of his country, led Heraclius to the altar of St. Sophia, and extorted a solemn oath that he would live and die with the people whom God had intrusted to The chagan was encamped in the plains of Thrace; but he dissembled his perfidious designs, and solicited an interview with the emperor near the town of Heraclea. Their reconciliation was

his care.

evident prophecy of a future event, which must, in his opinion, embarrass the Christian polemics.

70 Paul Warnefrid, de Gestis Langobardorum, 1. iv. c. 38, 42; Muratori, Annali d'Italia, tom. v. p. 305, &c.

celebrated with equestrian games; the senate and people, in their gayest apparel, resorted to the festival of peace; and the Avars beheld, with envy and desire, the spectacle of Roman luxury. On a sudden the hippodrome was encompassed by the Scythian cavalry, who had pressed their secret and nocturnal march: the tremendous sound of the chagan's whip gave the signal of the assault; and Heraclius, wrapping his diadem round his arm, was saved, with extreme hazard, by the fleetness of his horse. So rapid was the pursuit, that the Avars almost entered the golden gate of Constantinople with the flying crowds: but the plunder of the suburbs rewarded their treason, and they transported beyond the Danube two hundred and seventy thousand captives. On the shore of Chalcedon the emperor held a safer conference with a more honourable foe, who, before Heraclius descended from his galley, saluted with reverence and pity the majesty of the purple. The friendly offer of Sain, the Persian general, to conduct an embassy to the He solicits presence of the Great King was accepted with the warmest peace. gratitude; and the prayer for pardon and peace was humbly presented by the prætorian præfect, the præfect of the city, and one of the first ecclesiastics of the patriarchal church.72 But the lieutenant of Chosroes had fatally mistaken the intentions of his master. "It was "not an embassy," said the tyrant of Asia, "it was the person of "Heraclius, bound in chains, that he should have brought to the foot "of my throne. I will never give peace to the emperor of Rome till "he has abjured his crucified God and embraced the worship of the "sun." Sain was flayed alive, according to the inhuman practice of his country; and the separate and rigorous confinement of the ambassadors violated the law of nations and the faith of an express stipulation. Yet the experience of six years at length persuaded the Persian monarch to renounce the conquest of Constantinople, and to specify the annual tribute or ransom of the Roman empire: a thousand talents of gold, a thousand talents of silver, a thousand silk robes, a thousand horses, and a thousand virgins. Heraclius subscribed these ignominious terms; but the time and space which he obtained to collect such treasures from the poverty of the East was industriously employed in the preparations of a bold and desperate attack.

71 The Paschal Chronicle, which sometimes introduces fragments of history into a barren list of names and dates, gives the best account of the treason of the Avars, p. 389, 390 [tom. i. p. 712 sq., ed. Bonn]. The number of captives is added by Nicephorus.

72 Some original pieces, such as the speech or letter of the Roman ambassadors (p. 386-388 [ed. Par.; tom. i. p. 707-709, ed. Bonn]), likewise constitute the merit of the Paschal Chronicle, which was composed, perhaps at Alexandria, under the relen of Heraclius.

His prepara

tions for war

A D. 621

Of the characters conspicuous in history, that of Heraclius is one of the most extraordinary and inconsistent. In the first and the last years of a long reign the emperor appears to be the slave of sloth, of pleasure, or of superstition; the careless and impotent spectator of the public calamities. But the languid mists of the morning and evening are separated by the brightness of the meridian sun: the Arcadius of the palace arose the Cæsar of the camp; and the honour of Rome and Heraclius was gloriously retrieved by the exploits and trophies of six adventurous campaigns. It was the duty of the Byzantine historians to have revealed the causes of his slumber and vigilance. At this distance we can only conjecture that he was endowed with more personal courage than political resolution; that he was detained by the charms, and perhaps the arts, of his niece Martina, with whom, after the death of Eudocia, he contracted an incestuous marriage;"3 and that he yielded to the base advice of the counsellors who urged, as a fundamental law, that the life of the emperor should never be exposed in the field. Perhaps he was awakened by the last insolent demand of the Persian conqueror; but at the moment when Heraclius assumed the spirit of an hero, the only hopes of the Romans were drawn from the vicissitudes of fortune, which might threaten the proud prosperity of Chosroes, and must be favourable to those who had attained the lowest period of depression. To provide for the expenses of war was the first care of the emperor; and for the purpose of collecting the tribute he was allowed to solicit the benevolence of the Eastern provinces. But the revenue no longer flowed in the usual channels; the credit of an arbitrary prince is annihilated by his power; and the courage of Heraclius was first displayed in daring to borrow the consecrated wealth of churches, under the solemn vow of restoring, with usury, whatever he had been compelled to employ in the service of religion and of the empire. The clergy themselves appear to have sympathised with the public distress; and the discreet patriarch of Alexan

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73 Nicephorus (p. 10, 11), who brands this marriage with the names of äbseμev and aliuro, is happy to observe, that of two sons, its incestuous fruit, the elder was marked by Providence with a stiff neck, the younger with the loss of hearing.

74 George of Pisidia (Acroas. i. 112-125, p. 5), who states the opinions, acquits the pusillanimous counsellors of any sinister views. Would he have excused the proud and contemptuous admonition of Crispus? Επιθωπτάζων οὐκ ἔξον βασιλεῖ ἔφασκε κατα λιμπάνειν βασίλεια, καὶ τοῖς πόῤῥω ἐπιχωριάζειν δυνάμεσιν.

75 Εἰ τὰς ἐπ' ἄκρον ἠρμίνας εὐεξίας
Εσφαλμένας λίγουσιν οὐκ ἀπεικότως,
Κείσθω τὸ λοιπὸν ἐν κακοῖς τὰ Πέρσιδος,
Δυσιστρόφως δὲ, &c.

George Pisid. Acroas. i. 51, &c., p. 4.

The Orientals are not less fond of remarking this strange vicissitude; and I remember some story of Khosrou Parviz, not very unlike the ring of Polycrates of Samos.

dria, without admitting the precedent of sacrilege, assisted his sovereign by the miraculous or seasonable revelation of a secret treasure.76 Of the soldiers who had conspired with Phocas, only two were found to have survived the stroke of time and of the barbarians;77 the loss even of these seditious veterans was imperfectly supplied by the new levies of Heraclius; and the gold of the sanctuary united, in the same camp, the names, and arms, and languages of the East and West. He would have been content with the neutrality of the Avars; and his friendly entreaty that the chagan would act not as the enemy, but as the guardian of the empire, was accompanied with a more persuasive donative of two hundred thousand pieces of gold. Two days after the festival of Easter, the emperor, exchanging his purple for the simple garb of a penitent and warrior," gave the signal of his departure. To the faith of the people Heraclius recommended his children; the civil and military powers were vested in the most deserving hands; and the discretion of the patriarch and senate was authorised to save or surrender the city, if they should be oppressed in his absence by the superior forces of the enemy.

Persians,

The neighbouring heights of Chalcedon were covered with tents and arms; but if the new levies of Heraclius had been First experashly led to the attack, the victory of the Persians in the Heraclius sight of Constantinople might have been the last day of against the the Roman empire. As imprudent would it have been to A.D. 622. advance into the provinces of Asia, leaving their innumerable cavalry to intercept his convoys, and continually to hang on the lassitude and disorder of his rear. But the Greeks were still masters of the sea; a fleet of galleys, transports, and store-ships was assembled in the harbour; the barbarians consented to embark; a steady wind carried them through the Hellespont; the western and southern coast of Asia Minor lay on their left hand; the spirit of their chief was first displayed in a storm; and even the eunuchs of his train were excited to suffer and to work by the example of their master. He landed his troops on the confines of Syria and Cilicia, in the gulf of Scanderoon, where the coast suddenly turns to the south;79 and his discern

16 Baronius gravely relates this discovery, or rather transmutation, of barrels, not of honey, but of gold (Annal. Eccles. A.D. 620, No. 3, &c.). Yet the loan was arbitrary, since it was collected by soldiers, who were ordered to leave the patriarch of Alexandria no more than one hundred pounds of gold. Nicephorus (p. 11), two hundred years afterwards, speaks with ill-humour of this contribution, which the church of Constantinople might still feel.

"Theophylact Simocatta, 1. viii. c. 12 [p. 340, ed. Bonn]. This circumstance need not excite our surprise. The muster-roll of a regiment, even in time of peace, is renewed in less than twenty or twenty-five years.

78 He changed his purple, for black, buskins, and dyed them red in the blood of the Persians (Georg. Pisid. Acroas. iii. 118, 121, 122. See the Notes of Foggini, p. 35). "George of Piaidia (Acroas. ii. 10, p. 8) has fixed this important point of the

80

ment was expressed in the choice of this important post. From al
sides the scattered garrisons of the maritime cities and the moun-
tains might repair with speed and safety to his Imperial standard.
The natural fortifications of Cilicia protected and even concealed the
camp of Heraclius, which was pitched near Issus, on the same ground
where Alexander had vanquished the host of Darius. The angle
which the emperor occupied was deeply indented into a vast semi-
circle of the Asiatic, Armenian, and Syrian provinces; and to what-
soever point of the circumference he should direct his attack, it was
easy for him to dissemble his own motions, and to prevent those of
the enemy. In the camp of Issus the Roman general reformed the
sloth and disorder of the veterans, and educated the new recruits in
the knowledge and practice of military virtue. Unfolding the
miraculous image of Christ, he urged them to revenge the holy altars
which had been profaned by the worshippers of fire; addressing them
by the endearing appellations of sons and brethren, he deplored
the public and private wrongs of the republic. The subjects of a
monarch were persuaded that they fought in the cause of freedom, and
a similar enthusiasm was communicated to the foreign mercenaries,
who must have viewed with equal indifference the interest of Rome
and of Persia. Heraclius himself, with the skill and patience of a
centurion, inculcated the lessons of the school of tactics, and the
soldiers were assiduously trained in the use of their weapons and the
exercises and evolutions of the field. The cavalry and infantry, in
light or heavy armour, were divided into two parties; the trumpets
were fixed in the centre, and their signals directed the march, the
charge, the retreat or pursuit, the direct or oblique order, the deep
or extended phalanx, to represent in fictitious combat the operations
of genuine war. Whatever hardship the emperor imposed on the
troops, he inflicted with equal severity on himself; their labour, their
diet, their sleep, were measured by the inflexible rules of discipline;
and, without despising the enemy, they were taught to repose an
implicit confidence in their own valour and the wisdom of their leader.
Syrian and Cilician gates. They are elegantly described by Xenophon, who marched
through them a thousand years before. A narrow pass of three stadia, between steep
high rocks (irpa nilaro) and the Mediterranean, was closed at each end by strong
gates, impregnable to the land (agıλbuv oùn ùv ßíg), accessible by sea (Anabasis, 1. i.
[c. 4] p. 35, 36, with Hutchinson's Geographical Dissertation, p. vi.). The gates
were thirty-five parasangs, or leagues, from Tarsus (Anabasis, 1. i. [c. 4] p. 33, 34),
and eight or ten from Antioch. Compare Itinerar. Wesseling. p. 580, 581; Schultens,
Index Geograph. ad calcem Vit. Saladin. p. 9; Voyage en Turquie et en Perse, par
M. Otter, tom. i. p. 78, 79.

80 Heraclius might write to a friend in the modest words of Cicero: "Castra habu-
"imus ea ipsa quæ contra Darium habuerat apud Iesum Alexander, imperator hauɑ
"paulo melior quam aut tu aut ego." Ad Atticum, v. 20. Issus, a rich and
flourishing city in the time of Xenophon, was ruined by the prosperity of Alexandria
or Scanderoon, on the other side of the bay.

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