XVI
BELISARIUS
The Emperor's preparations for the Gothic
war were soon made, and in the summer of 535 two armies were sent forth from
Constantinople, one destined to act on the east and the other on the west of
the Adriatic. When we think of the mighty armaments by means of which Pompey
and Cæsar, or even Licinius and Constantine, had
contended for the mastery of the Roman world, the forces entrusted to the
generals of Justinian seem strangely small. We are not informed of the precise
number of the army sent to Dalmatia, but the whole tenor of the narrative leads
us to infer that it consisted of not more than 3,000 or 4,000 men. It fought
with varying fortunes but with ultimate success. Salona,
the Dalmatian capital, was taken by the Imperial army, wrested from them by the
Goths, retaken by the Imperialists. The Imperial general, a brave old barbarian
named Mundus, fell dead by the side of his
slaughtered son; but another general took his place, and being well supported
by a naval expedition, succeeded, as has been said, in reconquering Salona, drove out the Gothic generals, and
reincorporated Dalmatia with the Empire. This province, which had for many
generations been treated almost as a part of Italy, was now for four centuries
to be for the most part a dependency of Constantinople. The Dalmatian war was
ended by the middle of 536.
But it was of course to the Italian
expedition that the eyes of the spectators of the great drama were most eagerly
turned. Here Belisarius commanded, peerless among the generals of his own age,
and not surpassed by many of preceding or following ages. The force under his
command consisted of only 7,500 men, the greater part of whom were of barbarian
origin--Huns, Moors, Isaurians, Gepidse, Heruli, but they were welded together by that
instinct of military discipline and that unbounded admiration for their great
commander and confidence in his success which is the surest herald of victory.
Not only in nationality but in mode of fighting they were utterly unlike the
armies with which republican Rome had won the sovereignty of the world. In
those days it might have been truly said to the inhabitant of the seven-hilled
city as Macaulay has imagined Capys saying to
Romulus:
"Thine, Roman
| is the pilum:
Roman | the sword is thine.
The even trench, the bristling mound,
The legion's ordered line"--
but now, centuries of fighting with
barbarian foes, especially with the nimble squadrons of Persia, had completely
changed the character of the Imperial tactics. It was to the deadly aim of his
Hippo-toxotai (mounted bowmen) that Belisarius, in
pondering over his victories, ascribed his astonishing success. "He said
that at the beginning of his first great battle he had carefully studied the
characteristic differences of each army, in order that he might prevent his
little band from being overborne by sheer force of numbers. The chief
difference which he noted was that almost all the Roman (Imperialist) soldiers
and their Hunnish allies were good Hippo-toxotai,
while the Goths had none of them practiced the art of shooting on horseback.
Their cavalry fought only with javelins and swords, and their archers fought on
foot covered by the horsemen. Thus till the battle became a hand-to-hand
encounter the horsemen could make no reply to the arrows discharged at them
from a distance, and were therefore easily thrown into disorder, while the
foot-soldiers, though able to reply to the enemy's archers, could not stand
against the charges of his horse". From this passage we can see what were
the means by which Belisarius won his great victories. While the Goth, with his
huge broadsword and great javelin, chafing for a hand-to-hand encounter with the
foe, found himself mowed down by the arrows of a distant enemy, the nimble
barbarian who called himself a Roman solder discharged his arrows at the
cavalry, dashed in impetuous onset against the infantry, wheeled round, feigned
flight, sent his arrows against the too eagerly advancing horsemen, in fact, by
Parthian tactics won a Roman victory, or to use a more modern illustration, the
Hippo-toxotai were the "Mounted Rifles" of
the Imperial army.
The expedition under the command of
Belisarius made its first attack on the Gothic kingdom in Sicily. Here the
campaign was little more than a triumphant progress. In reliance on its
professions of loyalty, Theodoric and his successors had left the wealthy and
prosperous island almost bare of Gothic troops, and now the provincials, eager
to form once more a part of the Eternal Roman Empire, opened the gates of city
after city to the troops of Justinian; only at Palermo was a stout resistance
made by the Gothic soldiers who garrisoned the city. The walls were strong, and
that part of them which bordered on the harbour was
thought to be so high and massive as not to need the defence of soldiers. When unobserved by the foe, Belisarius hoisted up his men, seated
in boats, to the yard-arms of his ships and made them clamber out of the boats
on to the unguarded parapet. This daring manœuvre gave him the complete command of the Gothic position, and the garrison
capitulated without delay. So was the whole island of Sicily won over to the
realm of Justinian before the end of 535, and Belisarius, Consul for the year,
rode through the streets of Syracuse on the last day of his term of office,
scattering his "donative" to the shouting
soldiers and citizens.
Operations in 536, the second year of the
war, were suspended for some months by a military mutiny at Carthage, which
called for the presence of Belisarius in Africa. But the mutineers quailed
before the very name of their late commander. Carthage was delivered from the
siege wherewith they were closely pressing it, a battle was won in the open
field, and the rebellion though not yet finally crushed was sufficiently
weakened for Belisarius to return to Sicily in the late spring of 536. He
crossed the Straits of Messina, landed in Italy, was received by the
provincials of Bruttii and Lucania with open arms, and met with no check to his progress till, probably in the
early days of June, he stood with his army under the walls of the little town
of Neapolis, which in our own days is represented by
a successor ten times as large, the superbly situated city of Naples. Here a
strong Gothic garrison held the place for Theodahad and prevented the surrender which many of the citizens, especially those of the
poorer class, would gladly have made. An orator, who was sent by the
Neapolitans to plead their cause in the general's camp, vainly endeavoured to persuade Belisarius to march forward to
Rome, leaving the fate of, Naples to be decided under the walls of the capital.
The Imperial general could not leave so strong a place untaken in his rear, and
though himself anxious enough to meet Theodahad,
commenced the siege of the city. His land army was supported by the fleet which
was anchored in the harbour, yet the operations of
the siege languished, and after twenty days Belisarius seemed to be no nearer
winning the prize of war than on the first day. But just then one of his
soldiers, a brave and active Isaurian mountaineer,
reported that he had found a means of entering the empty aqueduct through
which, till Belisarius severed the communication, water had been supplied to
the city. The passage was narrow, and at one point the rock had to be filed
away to allow the soldiers to pass, but all this was done without arousing the
suspicions of the besieged, and one night Belisarius sent six hundred soldiers,
headed by the Isaurian, into the aqueduct, having
arranged with them the precise portion of the walls to which they were to rush
as soon as they emerged into the city. The daring attempt succeeded. The
soldiers found themselves in a large cavern with a narrow opening at the top,
on the brink of which was a cottage. Some of the most active among them swarmed
up the sides of the cave, found the cottage inhabited by one old woman who was
easily frightened into silence, and let down a stout leather thong which they
fastened to the stem of an olive-tree, and by which all their comrades mounted.
They rushed to that part of the walls beneath which Belisarius was standing,
blew their trumpets, and assisted the besiegers to ascend. The Gothic garrison
were taken prisoners and treated honourably by
Belisarius. The city suffered some of the usual horrors of a sack from the wild
Hunnish soldiers of the Empire, but these were somewhat mitigated, and the
citizens who had been taken prisoners were restored to liberty, in compliance
with the earnest entreaties of Belisarius.
The fall of Neapolis,
to whose assistance no Gothic army had marched, and the unhindered conquest of
Southern Italy crowned the already towering edifice of Theodahad's unpopularity. It is not likely that this selfish and unwarlike pedant--a "nithing", as they probably called him--had ever been
aught but a most unwelcome necessity to the lion-hearted Ostrogoths, and for
all but the families and friends of the three slain noblemen, the imprisonment
and the permitted murder of his benefactress must have deepened dislike into
horror. His dishonest intrigues with Constantinople were known to many,
intrigues in which even after Amalasuentha's death he
still offered himself and his crown for sale to the Emperor, and the Emperor,
notwithstanding his brave words about a truceless war, seemed willing to pay the caitiff his price. Some gleams of success which
shone upon the Gothic arms in Dalmatia towards the end of 535 filled the feeble
soul of Theodahad with presumptuous hope, and he
broke off with arrogant faithlessness the negotiations which he had begun.
Still, with all the gallant men under him longing to be employed, he struck not
one blow for his crown and country, but shut himself up in his palace, seeking
by the silliest auguries to ascertain the issue of the war. The most notable of
these vaticinations was "the Augury of the
Hogs", which he practiced by the advice of a certain Jewish magician. He
shut up in separate pens three batches of hogs, each batch consisting of ten.
One batch was labelled "Romans" (meaning
the Latin-speaking inhabitants of Italy), another "Goths", and the
third "Soldiers of the Emperor". They were all left for a certain
number of days without food, and when the appointed day was come, and the pens
were opened, all the "Gothic" hogs but two were found dead. The
"Emperor's soldiers", with very few exceptions, were living; of the
"Romans" half only were alive, and all had lost their bristles.
Ridiculous as the manner of divination was, it furnished no inapt type of the
miseries which the Gothic war was to bring upon all concerned in it, and not
least upon that Latin population which was still so keen to open its gates to
Belisarius.
But, as I have said, when Neapolis had fallen, the brave Gothic warriors felt that
they had submitted too long to the rule of a dastard like Theodahad.
They met in arms, a nation-parliament, on the plain of Regeta,
about forty-three miles from Rome in the direction of Terracina.
Here there was plenty of grass for the pasture of their horses, and here, while
the steeds grazed, the dismounted riders could deliberate as to the fortunes of
the state. There was found to be an unanimous determination that Iheodahad should be dethroned, and, instead of him, they
raised on the shield, Witigis, a man somewhat past
middle age, not of noble birth, who had distinguished himself by his deeds of valour thirty years before in the war of Sirmium. As soon as Theodahad heard the tidings of his deposition, he sought to escape with all speed to
Ravenna. The new king ordered a Goth named Optaris to
pursue him and bring him back alive or dead. Optaris had his own wrongs to avenge, for he had lost a rich and beautiful bride
through Theodahad's purchased interference on behalf
of another suitor. He followed him day and night, came up with him while still
on the road, "made him lie down on the pavement, and cut his throat as a
priest cuts the throat of a victim". So did Theodahad perish, one of the meanest insects that ever crawled across the page of
history.
Witigis, the new king of the Goths, had
personal courage and some experience of battles, but he was no statesman and,
as the event proved, no general. By his advice, the Goths committed the
astounding blunder of abandoning Rome and concentrating their forces for defence in the north of Italy. It is true that a garrison
of four thousand Goths was left in the city under the command of the brave
veteran Leudaris, but, unsupported by any army in the
field, this body of men was too small to hold so vast a city unless they were
aided by the inhabitants. As for Witigis, he marched
northward to Ravenna with the bulk of the Gothic army and there celebrated, not
a victory, but a marriage. The only remaining scion of the race of Theodoric
was a young girl named Matasuentha, the sister of Athalaric. In some vain hope of consolidating his dynasty, Witigis divorced his wife and married this young princess.
The marriage was, as might have been expected, an unhappy one. Matasuentha shared the Romanising tendencies of her mother, and her spirit revolted against the alleged reasons
of state which gave her this elderly and low-born barbarian for a husband. In
the darkest hour of the Gothic fortunes (540) Matasuentha was suspected of opening secret negotiations with the Imperial leaders, and
even of seeking to aid the progress of their arms by crime.
By the end of November, 536, Belisarius,
partly aided by the treachery of the Gothic general who commanded in Samnium,
had recovered for the Empire all that part of the Italian peninsula which, till
lately, formed the Kingdom of Naples. Pope Silverius,
though he had sworn under duresse an oath of fealty
to King Witigis, sent messengers offering to
surrender the Eternal City, and the four thousand Goths, learning what
negotiations were going forward, came to the conclusion that it was hopeless
for them to attempt to defend the City against such a general as Belisarius and
against the declared wish of the citizens. They accordingly marched out of Rome
by a northern gate as Belisarius entered it on the south. The brave old Leudaris, refusing to abandon his trust, was taken
prisoner, and sent, together with the keys of the City, to Justinian, most
undoubted evidences of victory.
Belisarius took up his headquarters in the Pincian Palace (on that hill at the north of the City which
is now the fashionable promenade of the Roman aristocracy), and from thence
commanded a wide outlook over that part of the Campagna on which, as he knew, a besieging army would shortly encamp. He set to work
with all speed to repair the walls of the City, which had been first erected by
Aurelian and afterwards repaired by Honorius at dates respectively 260 and 130
years before the entry of Belisarius. Time and barbarian sieges had wrought much
havoc on the line of defense, the work of repair had to be done in haste, and
to this day some archaeologists think that it is possible to recognize the
parts repaired by Belisarius through the rough style of the work and the
heterogeneous nature of the materials employed in it. All through the winter
months his ships were constantly arriving with cargoes of corn from Sicily,
which were safely stored away in the great State-warehouses. These preparations
were viewed with dismay by the citizens, who had fondly imagined that their
troubles were over when the Gothic soldiers marched forth by the Porta Flaminia; that any fighting
which might follow would take place on some distant field, and that they would
have nothing to do but calmly to await the issue of the combat. This, however,
was by no means the general's idea of the right way of playing the game. He
knew that the Goths immensely outnumbered his forces; he knew also that they
were of old bad besiegers of cities, the work of siege requiring a degree of patience
and scientific skill to which the barbarian nature could not attain; and his
plan was to wear them down by compelling them to undertake a long and wearisome
blockade before he tried conclusions with them in the open field. If the Roman
clergy and people had known that this was in his thoughts, they would probably
not have been so ready to welcome the eagles of the Emperor into their city.
Some hint of the growing disaffection of the
Roman people was carried to Ravenna and quickened the impatience of Witigis, who was now eager to retrieve the blunder which he
had committed in the evacuation of Rome. He marched southward with a large
army, which is represented to us as consisting of 150,000 men, and in the early
days of March he was already at the other end of the Milvian Bridge (now the Ponte Molle), about two miles from
Rome. Belisarius had meant to dispute the passage of the Tiber at this point.
The fort on the Tuscan side of the river was garrisoned, and a large body of
soldiers was encamped on the Roman side; but when the garrison of the fort saw
the vast multitude of the enemy, who at sunset pitched their tents upon the
plain, they despaired of making a successful resistance, and abandoning the
fort under cover of the night, skulked off into the country districts of
Latium. Thus one point of the game was thrown away. Next morning the Goths
finding their passage unopposed, marched quietly over the bridge and fell upon
the Roman camp. A desperate battle followed, in which Belisarius, exposing
himself more than a general should have done, did great deeds of valour. He was mounted on a noble steed, dark roan, with a
white star on its forehead, which the barbarians, from that mark on its brow,
called "Balan". Some Imperial soldiers who
had deserted to the enemy knew the steed and his rider, and shouted to their
comrades to aim all their darts at Balan. So the cry
"Balan!" "Balan!"
resounded through the Gothic ranks, and though only imperfectly understood by
many of the utterers, had the effect of concentrating
the fight round Belisarius and the dark-roan steed. The general was nobly
protected by the picked troops which formed his guard. They fell by scores
around him, but he himself, desperately fighting, received never a wound,
though a thousand of the noblest Goths lay dead in the narrow space of ground
where this Homeric combat had been going forward. The Imperialists not merely
withstood the Gothic onset, but drove their opponents back to their camp, which
had been already erected on the Roman bank of the Tiber. Fresh troops,
especially of cavalry, issuing forth from thence turned the tide of battle,
and, overborne by irresistible numbers, Belisarius and his soldiers were soon
in full flight towards Rome. When they arrived under the walls, with the barbarians
so close behind them that they seemed to form one raging multitude, they found
the gates closed against them by the panic-stricken garrison. Even Belisarius
in vain shouted his orders to open the gates; in his gory face and dust-stained
figure the defenders did not recognise their
brilliant leader. A halt was called, a desperate charge was made upon the
pursuing Goths, who were already beginning to pour down into the fosse; they
were pushed back some distance, not far, but far enough to enable the Imperialists
to reform their ranks, to make the presence of the general known to the
defenders on the walls, to have the gates opened, and in some sort of military
order to enter the city. Thus the sun set on Rome beleaguered, the barbarians
outside the City. Belisarius with his gallant band of soldiers thinned but not
disheartened by the struggle, within its walls, and the citizens--
"with terror dumb,
Or whispering with white lips,
'The foe, they come, they come!"
Of the great Siege of Rome, which began on
that day, early in March, 537, and lasted a year and nine days, till March,
538, a siege perhaps the most memorable of all that "Roma Æterna" has seen and has groaned under, as part of the
penalty of her undying greatness, it will be impossible here to give even a meagre outline. The events of those wonderful 374 days are
chronicled almost with the graphic minuteness of a Kinglike by a man whom we
may call the literary assessor of Belisarius, the rhetorician Procopius of Cæsarea. One or two incidents of the siege may be briefly
noticed here, and then we must hasten onwards to its close.
Owing to the vast size of Rome not even the
host of the Goths was able to accomplish a complete blockade of the City. They
formed seven camps six on the left and one on the right bank of the Tiber, and
they obstructed eight out of its fourteen gates; but while the east and south
sides of the City were thus pretty effectually blockaded, there were large
spaces in the western circuit by which it was tolerably easy for Belisarius to
receive reinforcements, to bring in occasional convoys of provisions, and to
send away non-combatants who diminished his resisting power. One of the hardest
blows dealt by the barbarians was their severance of the eleven great aqueducts
from which Rome received its water. This privation of an element so essential
to the health and comfort of the Roman under the Empire (who resorted to the
bath as a modern Italian resorts to the café or the music hall), was felt as a
terrible blow by all classes, and wrought a lasting change, and not a
beneficial one, in the habits of the citizens, and in the sanitary condition of
Rome. It also seemed likely to have an injurious effect on the food supply of
the City, since the mills in which corn was ground for the daily rations of the
people were turned by water-power derived from the Aqueduct of Trajan.
Belisarius, however, always fertile in resource, a man who, had he lived in the
nineteenth century, would assuredly have been a great engineer, contrived to
make Father Tiber grind out the daily supply of flour for his Roman children.
He moored two barges in the narrowest part of the stream, where the current was
the strongest, put his mill-stones on board of them, and hung a water-wheel
between them to turn his mills. These river water-mills continued to be used on
the Tiber all through the Middle Ages, and even until they were superseded by
the introduction of steam.
The Goths did not resign themselves to the
slow languors of a blockade till they had made one
vigorous and confident attempt at a storm. On the eighteenth day of the siege
the terrified Romans saw from their windows the mighty armament approaching the
City. A number of wooden towers as high as the walls, mounted on wheels, and
drawn by the stout oxen of Etruria, moved menacingly forward amid the
triumphant shouts of the barbarians, each of whom had a bundle of boughs and
reeds under his arm ready to be thrown into the fosse, and so prepare a level
surface upon which the terrible engines might approach the walls. To resist
this attack Belisarius had prepared a large number of Balistæ (gigantic cross-bows worked by machinery and discharging a short wedge-like
bolt with such force as to break trees or stones) had planted on the walls,
great slings, which the soldiers called Wild Asses (Onagri),
and had set in each gate the deadly machine known as the Wolf, and which was a
kind of double portcullis, worked both from above and from below.
But though the Gothic host was approaching
with its threatening towers close to the walls, Belisarius would not give the
signal, and not a Balista, nor a Wild Ass was allowed
to hurl its missiles against the foe. He only laughed aloud, and bade the
soldiers do nothing till he gave the word of command. To the citizens this
seemed an evil jest, and they grumbled aloud at the impudence of the general
who chose this moment of terrible suspense for merriment. But now when the
Goths were close to the fosse, Belisarius lifted his bow, singled out a
mail-clad chief, and sent an arrow through his neck, inflicting a deadly wound.
A great shout of triumph rose from the Imperial soldiers as the proudly accoutred barbarian rolled in the dust. Another shot,
another Gothic chief slain, and again a shout of triumph. Then the signal to
shoot was given to the soldiers, and hundreds of bolts from Wild Ass and Balista were hurtling through the air, aimed not at Gothic
soldiers, but at the luckless oxen that drew the ponderous towers. The beasts
being slain, it was impossible for the Goths who were immediately under the
walls and exposed to a deadly discharge of arrows from the battlements, to move
their towers either backward or forward, and there they remained mere
laughing-stocks in their huge immobility, till the end of the day, when they
with all the rest of the Gothic enginery were given as a prey to the flames.
Then men understood the meaning of the laughter of Belisarius as he watched the
preparations of the barbarians and derided their childish simplicity in
supposing that he would allow them calmly to move up their towers till they
touched his wall, without using his artillery to cripple their advance.
Though the attack with the towers had thus
failed there was still fierce fighting to be done on the south-east and
north-west of the City. At the Prænestine Gate (Porta Maggiore), that noble structure which is formed out
of the arcades of the Aqueducts, there was a desperate onslaught of the
barbarians, which at one time seemed likely to be successful, but a sudden
sortie of Belisarius taking them in their rear turned them to headlong flight.
In the opposite quarter the Aurelian Gate was commanded by the mighty
tomb-fortress then known as the Mausoleum of Hadrian, and now, in its
dismantled and degraded state, as the Castle of Sant'Angelo.
Here the peculiar shape of the fortress prevented the defenders from using
their Balistæ with proper effect on the advancing
foe, and when the besiegers were close under the walls the bolts from the
engines flew over their heads. It seemed as if, after all, by the Aurelian Gate
the barbarians would enter Rome, when, by a happy instinct, the garrison turned
to the marble statues which surrounded the tomb, wrenched them from their
bases, and rained down such a terrible shower of legs and arms and heads of
gods and goddesses on their barbarian assailants that these soon fled in utter
confusion.
The whole result of this great day of
assault was to convince Witigis and his counselors
that the City could not be taken in that manner, and that the siege must be
turned into a blockade. A general sally which Belisarius ordered, against his
better judgment, in order to still the almost mutinous clamours of his troops, and which took place about the fiftieth day of the siege, proved
almost as disastrous for the Romans as the assault had done for the Goths. It
was manifest that this was not a struggle which could be ended by a single blow
on either side. All the miseries of a long siege must be endured both by
attackers and attacked, and the only question was on which side patience would
first give way--whether the Romans under roofs, but short of provisions, or the
Goths better fed, but encamped on the deadly Campagna,
would be the first to succumb to hunger and disease.
Witigis had been in his day a brave
soldier, but he evidently knew nothing of the art of war. He allowed Belisarius
to disencumber himself of many useless consumers of food by sending the women,
the children, and the slaves out of the City. His attention was disturbed by
feigned attacks, when the reinforcements, which were tardily sent by Justinian,
and the convoys of provisions, which had been collected by the wife of
Belisarius, the martial Antonina, were to be brought
within the walls. And, lastly, when at length, about the ninth month of the
siege, he proposed a truce and the reopening of negotiations with
Constantinople, he did not even insert in the conditions of the truce any limit
to the quantity of supplies which under its cover the Imperialists might
introduce into the City. Thus he played the game of his wily antagonist, and
abandoned all the advantages--and they were not many--which the nine months of
blockade had won for him.
The parleyings which preceded this truce have an especial interest for us, whose forefathers
were at this very time engaged in making England their own. The Goths, after
complaining that Justinian had broken the solemn compact made between Zeno and
Theodoric as to the conquest of Italy from Odovacar, went on to propose terms
of compromise. "They were willing", they said, "for the sake of
peace to give up Sicily, that large and wealthy island, so important to a ruler
who had now become master of Africa". Belisarius answered with sarcastic
courtesy: "Such great benefits should be repaid in kind. We will concede
to the Goths the possession of the whole island of Britain, which is much
larger than Sicily, and which was once possessed by the Romans as Sicily was
once possessed by the Goths". Of course that country, though much larger
than Sicily, was one the possession of which was absolutely unimportant to the
Emperor and his general. "What mattered it", they might well say,
"who owned that misty and poverty-stricken island. The oysters of Rutupiæ, some fine watch-dogs from Caledonia, a little lead
from the Malvern Hills, and some cargoes of corn and wool--this was all that
the Empire had ever gained from her troublesome conquest. Even in the world of
mind Britain had done nothing more than give birth to one second-rate heretic
(Pelagius). The curse of poverty and of barbarous insignificance was upon her,
and would remain upon her till the end of time".
The truce, as will be easily understood,
brought no alleviation to the sufferings of the Goths, who were now almost more
besieged than besiegers, and who were dying by thousands in the unhealthy Campagna. Before the end of March, 538, they broke up their
encampment, and marched, in sullen gloom, northwards to defend Ravenna, which
was already being threatened by the operations of a lieutenant of Belisarius.
The 150,000 men who had hastened to Rome, dreading lest the Imperialists should
escape before they could encompass the City, were reduced to but a small
portion of that number, perhaps not many more than the 10,000 which, after all
his reinforcements had been received, seems to have been the greatest number of
actual soldiers serving under Belisarius in the defence of Rome.
I pass rapidly over the events of 538 and
539. The Imperial generals pressed northwards along the Flaminian Way. Urbino,
Rimini, Osimo, and other cities in this region were
taken by them. But the Goths fought hard, though they gave little proof of
strategic skill; and once, when they recaptured the great city of Milan, it
looked as though they might almost be about to turn the tide of conquest.
Evidently they were far less demoralized by their past prosperity than the
Vandals. Perhaps also the Roman population of Italy, who had met with far
gentler and more righteous treatment from the Ostrogoths than their compeers in
Africa had met with from the Vandals, and who were now suffering the horrors of
famine, owing to the operations of the contending armies, assisted the
operations of the Byzantine invaders less than the Roman provincials in Africa
had done. Whatever the cause, it was not till the early months of 540, nearly
five years after the beginning of the war, that Belisarius and his army stood
before the walls and among the rivers of Ravenna, almost the last stronghold of Witigis. Belisarius blockaded the city, and his
blockade was a far more stringent one than that which Witigis had drawn around Rome. Still there was the ancient and well-founded reputation
for impregnability of the great Adrian city, and, moreover, just at this time
the ambassadors, sent by Witigis to Justinian,
returned from Constantinople, bearing the Emperor's consent to a compromise.
Italy, south of the Po, was to revert to the Empire; north of that river, the
Goths were still to hold it, and the royal treasure was to be equally divided
between the two states. Belisarius called a council of war, and all his
officers signed a written opinion "that the proposals of the Emperor were
excellent, and that no better terms could be obtained from the
Barbarians". This, however, was by no means the secret thought of
Belisarius, who had set his heart on taking Witigis as a captive to Constantinople, and laying the keys of Ravenna at his master's
feet. A strange proposition which came from the beleaguered city seemed to open
the way to the accomplishment of his purpose. The Gothic nobles suggested that
he, the great Captain, whose might in war they had experienced, should become
their leader, should mount the throne of Theodoric, and should be crowned
"King of the Italians and Goths", the change in the order of the
names indicating the subordinate position which the humbled barbarians were
willing to assume. Belisarius seemed to acquiesce in the proposal (though his
secretary assures us that he never harboured a
thought of disloyalty to his master), and received the oath of the Gothic
envoys for the surrender of the city, postponing his own coronation-oath to his
new subjects till he could swear it in the presence of Witigis and all his nobles, for Witigis, too, was a
consenting, nay, an eager, party to the transaction. Thus, by an act of
dissimulation, which brought some stain on his knightly honour (we are tempted to use the language of chivalry in speaking of these events),
but which left no stain on his loyalty to the Emperor of Rome, did Belisarius
obtain possession of the impregnable Ravenna. He marched in, he and his
veterans, into the famine-stricken city. When the Gothic women saw the little
dark men filing past them through the streets, and contrasted them with their
own long-limbed, flaxen-haired giants, they spat in
the faces of their husbands, and said: "Are you men, to have allowed
yourselves to be beaten by such manikins as these?"
Before the triumphal entry was finished the
Goths had no doubt discovered that they were duped. No coronation oath was
sworn. Belisarius, still the humble servant of Justinianus Augustus, did not allow himself to be raised on the shield and saluted as King
of the Italians and Goths. The Gothic warriors were kindly treated, but
dismissed to their farms between the Apennines and the Adriatic. Ravenna was
again an Imperial city, and destined to remain so for two centuries. Witigis, with his wife and children, were carried captives
to Constantinople where, before many years were over, the dethroned monarch
died. His widow, Matasuentha, was soon remarried to
Germanus, the nephew of Justinian, and thus the granddaughter of Theodoric
obtained that position as a great lady of Byzantium which was far more
gratifying to her taste than the rude royalty of Ravenna.
There is one more personage whose subsequent
fortunes must be briefly glanced at here. Cassiodorus, the minister of
Theodoric and Amalasuentha, remained, as we regret to
find, in the service of Theodahad when sole king and
composed his stilted sentences at the bidding of Amalasuentha's murderer. Witigis also employed him to write his
address to his subjects on ascending the throne. He does not seem to have taken
any part in the siege of Rome, and before the tide of war rolled back upon
Ravenna, he had withdrawn from public affairs. He retired to his native town, Squillace, high up on the Calabrian hills, and there
founded a monastery and a hermitage in the superintendence of which his happy
years glided on till he died, having nearly completed a century of life. His
was one of the first and greatest of the literary monasteries which, by
perpetuating copies of the Scriptures, and the Greek and Roman classics, have
conferred so great a boon on posterity. When Ceolfrid,
the Abbot of Jarrow, would offer to the Holy Father
at Rome a most priceless gift, he sent the far-famed Codex Amiatinus,
a copy of the Vulgate, made by a disciple of Cassiodorus, if not by Cassiodorus
himself.
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