XIV
THEODORIC'S TOMB
The death of Boëthius occurred probably
about the middle of 524, and in the same year, as it would seem, Theodoric left
Verona and returned to his old quarters at Ravenna. The danger from the
barbarians on the northern frontier had apparently been averted, but a far
greater danger, the hatred and the terror of his subjects of Roman origin, had
entered his kingdom. It was probably during this same year 524 that the zeal of
the orthodox Emperor Justin began to flame out against the Arians. Their
churches were taken from them and given to the Catholics, and, as we hear that
several Arians at this time embraced the Catholic faith, we may conjecture that
the usual methods of conversion in that age, confiscation, imprisonment, and
possibly torture, had been pretty freely employed. These measures, coming close
after the alleged conspiracy of the Senators, or perhaps simultaneously with
it, completed the exasperation of Theodoric, He sent for the Pope, John I., a
Tuscan, who had been lately elevated to the Papal chair, and when the successor
of St. Peter appeared at Ravenna commanded him, with some haughtiness in his
tone, to proceed to Constantinople, to the Emperor Justin, and tell him that
"he must in no wise attempt to win over those whom he calls heretics to
the Catholic religion". The Pope is said to have made some protestations,
distinguishing between his duty to God and his duty to his king, but
nevertheless accepted a commission of some kind or other to treat with the
Emperor on the subject of mutual toleration between Catholics and Arians.
(525) He set forth at the head of a
brilliant train, accompanied by Ecclesius, Bishop of
Ravenna, and Eusebius, Bishop of Fano, by Senator Theodorus, who had been consul in 505, by Senator Importunus, consul in 509, who was descended from the
historic family of the Decii, and from whom his
coevals expected deeds worthy of that illustrious name, by Senator Agapetus, who had been consul along with the Eastern
Emperor in 517, and by many other noblemen and bishops.
The visit of a pope to Constantinople, an
event which had not occurred since the very earliest days of the new capital,
created profound sensation in that city and was the very thing to cement that
union between the Papacy and the Empire which constituted Theodoric's greatest
danger. The whole city poured forth with crosses and candles to meet the Pope
and his companions at the twelfth milestone, and to testify with shouts their
veneration for the Apostles Peter and Paul, whose representative they deemed
that they saw before them. "Justinus Augustus", the fortunate farm-lad, before whom in his old age all the
great ones of the earth prostrated themselves in reverence, now saluted the
Vicar of St. Peter with the same gestures of adoration. The coronation of the
Emperor, who had already been for six years on the throne, was celebrated with
the utmost magnificence, the Roman Pontiff himself placing the diadem on his
head. Then the Pope and all the Senators with tears besought the Emperor that
their embassy might be acceptable in his sight. In the private interviews which
were held, the Pope probably hinted to his orthodox ally the dangers which
might result to the Catholic cause in Italy, if Theodoric, hitherto so tolerant
a heretic, should be provoked to measures of retaliation on behalf of his
Church. There does seem to have been some modification of the persecuting
edicts against the Arians, and at least some restoration of churches to the
heretics, though certain Papal historians, unwilling to admit that a pope can
have pleaded for any concession to misbelievers, endeavour to represent the
Pope's mission as fruitless, while the Pope's person was greeted with
enthusiastic reverence. But that which is upon the whole our best authority
declares that "the Emperor Justin having met the Pope on his arrival as if
he were St. Peter himself, and having heard his message, promised that he would
comply with all his demands except that the converts who had given themselves
to the Catholic faith could by no means be restored to the Arians".
This last exception does not seem an
unreasonable one. Surely Theodoric could hardly have expected that Justin would
exert his Imperial power in order to force any of his subjects back into what
he deemed a deadly heresy. But for some cause or other, probably because he
perceived the mistake which he had committed in giving to the world so striking
a demonstration of the new alliance between Emperor and Pope, Theodoric's
ambassadors, on their return to Ravenna, found their master in a state of wrath
bordering on frenzy. All, both Pope and Senators, were cast into prison and
there treated with harshness and cruelty. The Pope, who was probably an aged
and delicate man, began to languish in his dungeon, and there he died on the
25th of May, 526.
In the meantime, while the Papal embassy had
been absent on its mission to Constantinople, Theodoric had perpetrated another
crime under the influence of his maddening suspicions. Symmachus, father-in-law
of Boëthius, the venerable head of the Senate, a man
of saintly life and far advanced in years, had probably dared to show that he
condemned as well as lamented the execution of his brilliant son-in-law.
Against him, therefore, a charge, doubtless of treason, was brought by command
of the king. To be accused was of course to be condemned, and Symmachus was put
to death in one of the prisons at Ravenna.
After the deaths of these three men, Boëthius, Symmachus, and Pope John, all chance of peace
between Theodoric and his subjects, and what was worse, all chance of peace
between Theodoric and his nobler and truer self was over, and there was nothing
left him but to die in misery and remorse. It was probably in these summer days
of 526 that (as before stated) he presented his young grandson Athalaric to his faithful Goths as their king. An edict was
issued--and the faithful groaned when they saw that it bore the
counter-signature of a Jewish Treasury-clerk--that on Sunday the 30th of August
all the Catholic churches of Italy should be handed over to the Arians. But
this tremendous religious revolution was not to be accomplished, nor was an
insurrection of the Catholics to be required in order to arrest it. The edict
was published on Wednesday the 26th of August. On the following day the King
was attacked by diarrœa, and after three days of
violent pain he died on the 30th of August, the very day on which the churches
were to have been handed over to the heretics and ninety-seven days after the
death of the Pope.
There is certainly something in this account
of Theodoric's death which suggests the idea of arsenical poisoning. No hint of
this kind is given by any of the annalists, but they
are all hostile to Theodoric and disposed to see in his rapid illness and most
opportune death a Divine judgment for his meditated persecution of the Church.
On the other hand it is impossible to read the account of his strange
incoherent deeds and words during the last three years of his life, without
suspecting that his brain was diseased and that he was not fully responsible
for his actions. As bearing on this question it is worth
while to quote the story of his death given by a Greek historian
(Procopius) who wrote twenty-four years after his death. It is, perhaps, only
an idle tale, but it shows the kind of stories which were current among the
citizens of Ravenna as to the last days of their great king. "When
Theodoric was dining, a few days after the death of Symmachus and Boëthius, the servants placed on the table a large fish's
head. This seemed to Theodoric to be the head of Symmachus, newly slain (this
is, of course, an error. Theodoric's death was about two years after that of Boëthius, and many months after that of Symmachus). The
teeth seemed to gnaw the lower lip, the eyes glared at him with wrath and
frenzy, the dead man appeared, to threaten him with utmost vengeance. Terrified
by this amazing portent and chilled to the bone with fear, he hastily sought
his couch, where, having ordered the servants to pile bed-clothes upon him, he
slept awhile. Then sending for Elpidius, the
physician, he related all that had happened to him, and wept for his sins
against Symmachus and Boëthius. And with these tears
and with bitter lamentations for the tragedy in which he had taken part, he
soon afterwards died, this being the first and last injustice which he had
committed against any of his subjects. And it proceeded from his not carefully
sifting, as he was wont to do, the evidence on which a capital charge was
grounded".
This story of Procopius, if it have any
foundation at all, seems to show that Theodoric's last days were passed in
delirium, and might suggest a doubt whether in the heart-break of these later
years he had not endeavoured to drown his sorrows in
wine. But it is interesting to see that the Greek historian, though writing
from a somewhat hostile point of view, recognizes emphatically the justice of
Theodoric's ordinary administration, and considers the execution of Symmachus
and Boëthius (we ought to add the imprisonment of the
Pope and his co-ambassadors) as the one tyrannical series of acts which marred
the otherwise fair fame of a patriot-king.
The tomb of Theodoric still stands, a noble
monument of the art of the sixth century, outside the walls of the north-east
corner of Ravenna. This edifice, which belongs to the same class of sepulchral
buildings as the tomb of Hadrian (now better known as the Castle of S. Angelo),
is built of squared marble stones, and consists of two storeys,
the lower one a decagon, the upper one circular. The roof is composed of one
enormous block of Istrian marble 33 feet in diameter,
3 feet in height, and weighing, it is said, nearly 300 tons. It is a marvel and
a mystery how, with the comparatively rude engineering appliances of that age,
so ponderous a mass can have been transported from such a distance and raised
to such a height. At equal intervals round the outside of this shallow,
dome-like roof, twelve stone brackets are attached to it. They are now marked
with the names of eight Apostles and of the four Evangelists. One conjecture as
to their destination is that they were originally crowned with statues, perhaps
of these Apostles and Evangelists; another, to me not very probable, is, that
the ropes used (if any were used) in lifting the mighty monolith to its place
were passed through these, which would thus be the handles of the dome.
This mausoleum, which is generally called La Rotonda by the citizens of Ravenna, was used in the
Middle Ages as the choir of the Church of S. Maria della Rotonda, and divine service was celebrated in it by
the monks of an adjoining monastery. It is now a "public monument"
and there are few traces left of its ecclesiastical employment. The basement,
as I have seen it, is often filled with water, exuding from the marshy soil:
the upper storey is abandoned to gloom and silence.
Of Theodoric himself, whose body, according
to tradition, was once deposited in a porphyry vase in the upper storey of the
mausoleum, there is now no vestige in the great pile which in his own life-time
he raised as his intended sepulchre. Nor is this any
recent spoliation. Agnellus, Bishop of Ravenna,
writing in the days of Charlemagne, says that the body of Theodoric was not in
the mausoleum, and had been, as he thought, cast forth out of its sepulchre, and the wonderful porphyry vase in which it had
been enclosed placed at the door of the neighbouring monastery. A recent enquirer (Corrado Ricci)has
connected these somewhat ambiguous words of Agnellus with a childish story told by Pope Gregory the Great, who wrote some seventy
years after the death of Theodoric. According to this story, a holy hermit, who
lived in the island of Lipari, on the day and hour of Theodoric's death saw
him, with bound hands and garments disarranged, dragged up the volcano of
Stromboli by his two victims Symmachus and Pope John, and hurled by them into
the fire-vomiting crater. What more likely, it is suggested, than that the
monks of the adjoining monastery should seize the opportunity of some crisis in
the troubled history of Ravenna to cast out the body of Theodoric from its
resting-place, and so, to the ignorant people, give point to Pope Gregory's
edifying narrative as to the disposal of his soul?
A discovery, which was made some forty years
ago in the neighbourhood of Ravenna, may possibly
throw some light on these mysterious words of Bishop Agnellus:
"As it seems to me, he was cast forth out of his sepulchre".
In May, 1854, the labourers employed in widening the
bed of the Canale Corsini (now the only navigable water-way between Ravenna and the sea) came, at the
depth of about five feet beneath the sea-level, on some tumuli, evidently
sepulchral in their character, made of bricks laid edgeways. Near one of these
tumuli, but lying apart by itself, was a golden cuirass adorned with precious
stones. The rascally labourers, when they caught
sight of their treasure, feigned to see nothing, promptly covered it up again,
and returned at nightfall to divide the spoil. A little piece of gold which was
found lying on the ground caused enquiries to be set on foot; the labourers were arrested, but unfortunately the greater part
of the booty had already been cast into the melting-pot. A few pieces were,
however, recovered, and are now in the museum at Ravenna, where they figure in
the catalogue as part of the armour of Odovacar. This
is, however, a mere conjecture, and another, at least equally probable
conjecture, is that the cuirass of gold once covered the breast of Theodoric.
The spot where it was found is about one hundred and fifty yards from the Rotonda, and if the monks had for any reason decided to
pillage the sepulchre of its precious deposit, this
was a not improbable place where they might hide it for a time. Certainly the
self-denial which they showed in not stripping the body of its costly covering
is somewhat surprising, but possibly the conspirators were few in number and
the chances of war may have removed them, before they had an opportunity to
disinter the body a second time and strip it of its cuirass, which moreover
could not have been easily disposed of without exciting suspicion.
One little circumstance which seems somewhat
to confirm this theory, is the fact that there is an enrichment running round
the border of the cuirass very similar in character to a decoration of the
cornice in Theodoric's tomb.
Whether this theory be correct or not, the
indignity which was certainly at some time offered to the mortal remains of the
great Ostrogothic king reminds us of the similar insults offered to the body of
the great Puritan Protector, Cromwell, like Theodoric, was carried to his grave
with all the conventional demonstrations of national mourning. He was dragged
from it again and cast out "like an abominable branch" when the
legitimate monarchy was restored, when "Church and King" were again
in the ascendant, and when the stout soldiers, who had made him in all but the
name king de facto, were obliged to bow their heads beneath the recovered might
of the king de jure.
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