<p><SPAN name="link422HCH0004" id="link422HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XLII: State Of The Barbaric World.—Part IV. </h2>
<p>It was the boast of the Colchians, that their ancestors had checked the
victories of Sesostris; and the defeat of the Egyptian is less incredible
than his successful progress as far as the foot of Mount Caucasus. They
sunk without any memorable effort, under the arms of Cyrus; followed in
distant wars the standard of the great king, and presented him every fifth
year with one hundred boys, and as many virgins, the fairest produce of
the land. <SPAN href="#link42note-76" name="link42noteref-76" id="link42noteref-76">76</SPAN> Yet he accepted this gift like the gold and
ebony of India, the frankincense of the Arabs, or the negroes and ivory of
Aethiopia: the Colchians were not subject to the dominion of a satrap, and
they continued to enjoy the name as well as substance of national
independence. <SPAN href="#link42note-77" name="link42noteref-77" id="link42noteref-77">77</SPAN> After the fall of the Persian empire,
Mithridates, king of Pontus, added Colchos to the wide circle of his
dominions on the Euxine; and when the natives presumed to request that his
son might reign over them, he bound the ambitious youth in chains of gold,
and delegated a servant in his place. In pursuit of Mithridates, the
Romans advanced to the banks of the Phasis, and their galleys ascended the
river till they reached the camp of Pompey and his legions. <SPAN href="#link42note-78" name="link42noteref-78" id="link42noteref-78">78</SPAN>
But the senate, and afterwards the emperors, disdained to reduce that
distant and useless conquest into the form of a province. The family of a
Greek rhetorician was permitted to reign in Colchos and the adjacent
kingdoms from the time of Mark Antony to that of Nero; and after the race
of Polemo <SPAN href="#link42note-79" name="link42noteref-79" id="link42noteref-79">79</SPAN> was extinct, the eastern Pontus, which
preserved his name, extended no farther than the neighborhood of
Trebizond. Beyond these limits the fortifications of Hyssus, of Apsarus,
of the Phasis, of Dioscurias or Sebastopolis, and of Pityus, were guarded
by sufficient detachments of horse and foot; and six princes of Colchos
received their diadems from the lieutenants of Caesar. One of these
lieutenants, the eloquent and philosophic Arrian, surveyed, and has
described, the Euxine coast, under the reign of Hadrian. The garrison
which he reviewed at the mouth of the Phasis consisted of four hundred
chosen legionaries; the brick walls and towers, the double ditch, and the
military engines on the rampart, rendered this place inaccessible to the
Barbarians: but the new suburbs which had been built by the merchants and
veterans, required, in the opinion of Arrian, some external defence. <SPAN href="#link42note-80" name="link42noteref-80" id="link42noteref-80">80</SPAN>
As the strength of the empire was gradually impaired, the Romans stationed
on the Phasis were neither withdrawn nor expelled; and the tribe of the
Lazi, <SPAN href="#link42note-81" name="link42noteref-81" id="link42noteref-81">81</SPAN> whose posterity speak a foreign dialect, and
inhabit the sea coast of Trebizond, imposed their name and dominion on the
ancient kingdom of Colchos. Their independence was soon invaded by a
formidable neighbor, who had acquired, by arms and treaties, the
sovereignty of Iberia. The dependent king of Lazica received his sceptre
at the hands of the Persian monarch, and the successors of Constantine
acquiesced in this injurious claim, which was proudly urged as a right of
immemorial prescription. In the beginning of the sixth century, their
influence was restored by the introduction of Christianity, which the
Mingrelians still profess with becoming zeal, without understanding the
doctrines, or observing the precepts, of their religion. After the decease
of his father, Zathus was exalted to the regal dignity by the favor of the
great king; but the pious youth abhorred the ceremonies of the Magi, and
sought, in the palace of Constantinople, an orthodox baptism, a noble
wife, and the alliance of the emperor Justin. The king of Lazica was
solemnly invested with the diadem, and his cloak and tunic of white silk,
with a gold border, displayed, in rich embroidery, the figure of his new
patron; who soothed the jealousy of the Persian court, and excused the
revolt of Colchos, by the venerable names of hospitality and religion. The
common interest of both empires imposed on the Colchians the duty of
guarding the passes of Mount Caucasus, where a wall of sixty miles is now
defended by the monthly service of the musketeers of Mingrelia. <SPAN href="#link42note-82" name="link42noteref-82" id="link42noteref-82">82</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-76" id="link42note-76">
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<p class="foot">
76 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-76">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Herodot. l. iii. c. 97.
See, in l. vii. c. 79, their arms and service in the expedition of Xerxes
against Greece.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-77" id="link42note-77">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
77 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-77">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Xenophon, who had
encountered the Colchians in his retreat, (Anabasis, l. iv. p. 320, 343,
348, edit. Hutchinson; and Foster's Dissertation, p. liii.—lviii.,
in Spelman's English version, vol. ii.,) styled them. Before the conquest
of Mithridates, they are named by Appian, (de Bell. Mithridatico, c. 15,
tom. i. p. 661, of the last and best edition, by John Schweighaeuser.
Lipsae, 1785 8 vols. largo octavo.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-78" id="link42note-78">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
78 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-78">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The conquest of Colchos
by Mithridates and Pompey is marked by Appian (de Bell. Mithridat.) and
Plutarch, (in Vit. Pomp.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-79" id="link42note-79">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
79 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-79">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ We may trace the rise
and fall of the family of Polemo, in Strabo, (l. xi. p. 755, l. xii. p.
867,) Dion Cassius, or Xiphilin, (p. 588, 593, 601, 719, 754, 915, 946,
edit. Reimar,) Suetonius, (in Neron. c. 18, in Vespasian, c. 8,)
Eutropius, (vii. 14,) Josephus, (Antiq. Judaic. l. xx. c. 7, p. 970, edit.
Havercamp,) and Eusebius, (Chron. with Scaliger, Animadvers. p. 196.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-80" id="link42note-80">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
80 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-80">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In the time of
Procopius, there were no Roman forts on the Phasis. Pityus and
Sebastopolis were evacuated on the rumor of the Persians, (Goth. l. iv. c.
4;) but the latter was afterwards restored by Justinian, (de Edif. l. iv.
c. 7.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-81" id="link42note-81">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
81 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-81">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In the time of Pliny,
Arrian, and Ptolemy, the Lazi were a particular tribe on the northern
skirts of Colchos, (Cellarius, Geograph. Antiq. tom. ii. p. 222.) In the
age of Justinian, they spread, or at least reigned, over the whole
country. At present, they have migrated along the coast towards Trebizond,
and compose a rude sea-faring people, with a peculiar language, (Chardin,
p. 149. Peyssonel p. 64.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-82" id="link42note-82">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
82 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-82">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ John Malala, Chron.
tom. ii. p. 134—137 Theophanes, p. 144. Hist. Miscell. l. xv. p.
103. The fact is authentic, but the date seems too recent. In speaking of
their Persian alliance, the Lazi contemporaries of Justinian employ the
most obsolete words, &c. Could they belong to a connection which had
not been dissolved above twenty years?]</p>
<p>But this honorable connection was soon corrupted by the avarice and
ambition of the Romans. Degraded from the rank of allies, the Lazi were
incessantly reminded, by words and actions, of their dependent state. At
the distance of a day's journey beyond the Apsarus, they beheld the rising
fortress of Petra, <SPAN href="#link42note-83" name="link42noteref-83" id="link42noteref-83">83</SPAN> which commanded the maritime country to the
south of the Phasis. Instead of being protected by the valor, Colchos was
insulted by the licentiousness, of foreign mercenaries; the benefits of
commerce were converted into base and vexatious monopoly; and Gubazes, the
native prince, was reduced to a pageant of royalty, by the superior
influence of the officers of Justinian. Disappointed in their expectations
of Christian virtue, the indignant Lazi reposed some confidence in the
justice of an unbeliever. After a private assurance that their ambassadors
should not be delivered to the Romans, they publicly solicited the
friendship and aid of Chosroes. The sagacious monarch instantly discerned
the use and importance of Colchos; and meditated a plan of conquest, which
was renewed at the end of a thousand years by Shah Abbas, the wisest and
most powerful of his successors. <SPAN href="#link42note-84"
name="link42noteref-84" id="link42noteref-84">84</SPAN> His ambition was
fired by the hope of launching a Persian navy from the Phasis, of
commanding the trade and navigation of the Euxine Sea, of desolating the
coast of Pontus and Bithynia, of distressing, perhaps of attacking,
Constantinople, and of persuading the Barbarians of Europe to second his
arms and counsels against the common enemy of mankind.</p>
<p>Under the pretence of a Scythian war, he silently led his troops to the
frontiers of Iberia; the Colchian guides were prepared to conduct them
through the woods and along the precipices of Mount Caucasus; and a narrow
path was laboriously formed into a safe and spacious highway, for the
march of cavalry, and even of elephants. Gubazes laid his person and
diadem at the feet of the king of Persia; his Colchians imitated the
submission of their prince; and after the walls of Petra had been shaken,
the Roman garrison prevented, by a capitulation, the impending fury of the
last assault. But the Lazi soon discovered, that their impatience had
urged them to choose an evil more intolerable than the calamities which
they strove to escape. The monopoly of salt and corn was effectually
removed by the loss of those valuable commodities. The authority of a
Roman legislator, was succeeded by the pride of an Oriental despot, who
beheld, with equal disdain, the slaves whom he had exalted, and the kings
whom he had humbled before the footstool of his throne. The adoration of
fire was introduced into Colchos by the zeal of the Magi: their intolerant
spirit provoked the fervor of a Christian people; and the prejudice of
nature or education was wounded by the impious practice of exposing the
dead bodies of their parents, on the summit of a lofty tower, to the crows
and vultures of the air. <SPAN href="#link42note-85" name="link42noteref-85" id="link42noteref-85">85</SPAN> Conscious of the increasing hatred, which
retarded the execution of his great designs, the just Nashirvan had
secretly given orders to assassinate the king of the Lazi, to transplant
the people into some distant land, and to fix a faithful and warlike
colony on the banks of the Phasis. The watchful jealousy of the Colchians
foresaw and averted the approaching ruin. Their repentance was accepted at
Constantinople by the prudence, rather than clemency, of Justinian; and he
commanded Dagisteus, with seven thousand Romans, and one thousand of the
Zani, <SPAN href="#link42note-8511" name="link42noteref-8511" id="link42noteref-8511">8511</SPAN> to expel the Persians from the coast of
the Euxine.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-83" id="link42note-83">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
83 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-83">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The sole vestige of
Petra subsists in the writings of Procopius and Agathias. Most of the
towns and castles of Lazica may be found by comparing their names and
position with the map of Mingrelia, in Lamberti.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-84" id="link42note-84">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
84 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-84">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See the amusing letters
of Pietro della Valle, the Roman traveler, (Viaggi, tom. ii. 207, 209,
213, 215, 266, 286, 300, tom. iii. p. 54, 127.) In the years 1618, 1619,
and 1620, he conversed with Shah Abbas, and strongly encouraged a design
which might have united Persia and Europe against their common enemy the
Turk.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-85" id="link42note-85">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
85 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-85">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See Herodotus, (l. i.
c. 140, p. 69,) who speaks with diffidence, Larcher, (tom. i. p. 399—401,
Notes sur Herodote,) Procopius, (Persic. l. i. c. 11,) and Agathias, (l.
ii. p. 61, 62.) This practice, agreeable to the Zendavesta, (Hyde, de
Relig. Pers. c. 34, p. 414—421,) demonstrates that the burial of the
Persian kings, (Xenophon, Cyropaed. l. viii. p. 658,) is a Greek fiction,
and that their tombs could be no more than cenotaphs.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-8511" id="link42note-8511">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
8511 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-8511">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These seem the same
people called Suanians, p. 328.—M.]</p>
<p>The siege of Petra, which the Roman general, with the aid of the Lazi,
immediately undertook, is one of the most remarkable actions of the age.
The city was seated on a craggy rock, which hung over the sea, and
communicated by a steep and narrow path with the land. Since the approach
was difficult, the attack might be deemed impossible: the Persian
conqueror had strengthened the fortifications of Justinian; and the places
least inaccessible were covered by additional bulwarks. In this important
fortress, the vigilance of Chosroes had deposited a magazine of offensive
and defensive arms, sufficient for five times the number, not only of the
garrison, but of the besiegers themselves. The stock of flour and salt
provisions was adequate to the consumption of five years; the want of wine
was supplied by vinegar; and of grain from whence a strong liquor was
extracted, and a triple aqueduct eluded the diligence, and even the
suspicions, of the enemy. But the firmest defence of Petra was placed in
the valor of fifteen hundred Persians, who resisted the assaults of the
Romans, whilst, in a softer vein of earth, a mine was secretly perforated.
The wall, supported by slender and temporary props, hung tottering in the
air; but Dagisteus delayed the attack till he had secured a specific
recompense; and the town was relieved before the return of his messenger
from Constantinople. The Persian garrison was reduced to four hundred men,
of whom no more than fifty were exempt from sickness or wounds; yet such
had been their inflexible perseverance, that they concealed their losses
from the enemy, by enduring, without a murmur, the sight and putrefying
stench of the dead bodies of their eleven hundred companions. After their
deliverance, the breaches were hastily stopped with sand-bags; the mine
was replenished with earth; a new wall was erected on a frame of
substantial timber; and a fresh garrison of three thousand men was
stationed at Petra to sustain the labors of a second siege. The
operations, both of the attack and defence, were conducted with skilful
obstinacy; and each party derived useful lessons from the experience of
their past faults. A battering-ram was invented, of light construction and
powerful effect: it was transported and worked by the hands of forty
soldiers; and as the stones were loosened by its repeated strokes, they
were torn with long iron hooks from the wall. From those walls, a shower
of darts was incessantly poured on the heads of the assailants; but they
were most dangerously annoyed by a fiery composition of sulphur and
bitumen, which in Colchos might with some propriety be named the oil of
Medea. Of six thousand Romans who mounted the scaling-ladders, their
general Bessas was the first, a gallant veteran of seventy years of age:
the courage of their leader, his fall, and extreme danger, animated the
irresistible effort of his troops; and their prevailing numbers oppressed
the strength, without subduing the spirit, of the Persian garrison. The
fate of these valiant men deserves to be more distinctly noticed. Seven
hundred had perished in the siege, two thousand three hundred survived to
defend the breach. One thousand and seventy were destroyed with fire and
sword in the last assault; and if seven hundred and thirty were made
prisoners, only eighteen among them were found without the marks of
honorable wounds. The remaining five hundred escaped into the citadel,
which they maintained without any hopes of relief, rejecting the fairest
terms of capitulation and service, till they were lost in the flames. They
died in obedience to the commands of their prince; and such examples of
loyalty and valor might excite their countrymen to deeds of equal despair
and more prosperous event. The instant demolition of the works of Petra
confessed the astonishment and apprehension of the conqueror. A Spartan
would have praised and pitied the virtue of these heroic slaves; but the
tedious warfare and alternate success of the Roman and Persian arms cannot
detain the attention of posterity at the foot of Mount Caucasus. The
advantages obtained by the troops of Justinian were more frequent and
splendid; but the forces of the great king were continually supplied, till
they amounted to eight elephants and seventy thousand men, including
twelve thousand Scythian allies, and above three thousand Dilemites, who
descended by their free choice from the hills of Hyrcania, and were
equally formidable in close or in distant combat. The siege of
Archaeopolis, a name imposed or corrupted by the Greeks, was raised with
some loss and precipitation; but the Persians occupied the passes of
Iberia: Colchos was enslaved by their forts and garrisons; they devoured
the scanty sustenance of the people; and the prince of the Lazi fled into
the mountains. In the Roman camp, faith and discipline were unknown; and
the independent leaders, who were invested with equal power, disputed with
each other the preeminence of vice and corruption. The Persians followed,
without a murmur, the commands of a single chief, who implicitly obeyed
the instructions of their supreme lord. Their general was distinguished
among the heroes of the East by his wisdom in council, and his valor in
the field. The advanced age of Mermeroes, and the lameness of both his
feet, could not diminish the activity of his mind, or even of his body;
and, whilst he was carried in a litter in the front of battle, he inspired
terror to the enemy, and a just confidence to the troops, who, under his
banners, were always successful. After his death, the command devolved to
Nacoragan, a proud satrap, who, in a conference with the Imperial chiefs,
had presumed to declare that he disposed of victory as absolutely as of
the ring on his finger. Such presumption was the natural cause and
forerunner of a shameful defeat. The Romans had been gradually repulsed to
the edge of the sea-shore; and their last camp, on the ruins of the
Grecian colony of Phasis, was defended on all sides by strong
intrenchments, the river, the Euxine, and a fleet of galleys. Despair
united their counsels and invigorated their arms: they withstood the
assault of the Persians and the flight of Nacoragan preceded or followed
the slaughter of ten thousand of his bravest soldiers. He escaped from the
Romans to fall into the hands of an unforgiving master who severely
chastised the error of his own choice: the unfortunate general was flayed
alive, and his skin, stuffed into the human form, was exposed on a
mountain; a dreadful warning to those who might hereafter be intrusted
with the fame and fortune of Persia. <SPAN href="#link42note-86"
name="link42noteref-86" id="link42noteref-86">86</SPAN> Yet the prudence of
Chosroes insensibly relinquished the prosecution of the Colchian war, in
the just persuasion, that it is impossible to reduce, or, at least, to
hold a distant country against the wishes and efforts of its inhabitants.
The fidelity of Gubazes sustained the most rigorous trials. He patiently
endured the hardships of a savage life, and rejected with disdain, the
specious temptations of the Persian court. <SPAN href="#link42note-8611"
name="link42noteref-8611" id="link42noteref-8611">8611</SPAN> The king of the
Lazi had been educated in the Christian religion; his mother was the
daughter of a senator; during his youth he had served ten years a
silentiary of the Byzantine palace, <SPAN href="#link42note-87"
name="link42noteref-87" id="link42noteref-87">87</SPAN> and the arrears of an
unpaid salary were a motive of attachment as well as of complaint. But the
long continuance of his sufferings extorted from him a naked
representation of the truth; and truth was an unpardonable libel on the
lieutenants of Justinian, who, amidst the delays of a ruinous war, had
spared his enemies and trampled on his allies. Their malicious information
persuaded the emperor that his faithless vassal already meditated a second
defection: an order was surprised to send him prisoner to Constantinople;
a treacherous clause was inserted, that he might be lawfully killed in
case of resistance; and Gubazes, without arms, or suspicion of danger, was
stabbed in the security of a friendly interview. In the first moments of
rage and despair, the Colchians would have sacrificed their country and
religion to the gratification of revenge. But the authority and eloquence
of the wiser few obtained a salutary pause: the victory of the Phasis
restored the terror of the Roman arms, and the emperor was solicitous to
absolve his own name from the imputation of so foul a murder. A judge of
senatorial rank was commissioned to inquire into the conduct and death of
the king of the Lazi. He ascended a stately tribunal, encompassed by the
ministers of justice and punishment: in the presence of both nations, this
extraordinary cause was pleaded, according to the forms of civil
jurisprudence, and some satisfaction was granted to an injured people, by
the sentence and execution of the meaner criminals. <SPAN href="#link42note-88" name="link42noteref-88" id="link42noteref-88">88</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-86" id="link42note-86">
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<p class="foot">
86 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-86">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The punishment of
flaying alive could not be introduced into Persia by Sapor, (Brisson, de
Regn. Pers. l. ii. p. 578,) nor could it be copied from the foolish tale
of Marsyas, the Phrygian piper, most foolishly quoted as a precedent by
Agathias, (l. iv. p. 132, 133.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-8611" id="link42note-8611">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
8611 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-8611">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ According to
Agathias, the death of Gubazos preceded the defeat of Nacoragan. The trial
took place after the battle.—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-87" id="link42note-87">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
87 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-87">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In the palace of
Constantinople there were thirty silentiaries, who were styled hastati,
ante fores cubiculi, an honorable title which conferred the rank, without
imposing the duties, of a senator, (Cod. Theodos. l. vi. tit. 23.
Gothofred. Comment. tom. ii. p. 129.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-88" id="link42note-88">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
88 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-88">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ On these judicial
orations, Agathias (l. iii. p. 81-89, l. iv. p. 108—119) lavishes
eighteen or twenty pages of false and florid rhetoric. His ignorance or
carelessness overlooks the strongest argument against the king of Lazica—his
former revolt. * Note: The Orations in the third book of Agathias are not
judicial, nor delivered before the Roman tribunal: it is a deliberative
debate among the Colchians on the expediency of adhering to the Roman, or
embracing the Persian alliance.—M.]</p>
<p>In peace, the king of Persia continually sought the pretences of a
rupture: but no sooner had he taken up arms, than he expressed his desire
of a safe and honorable treaty. During the fiercest hostilities, the two
monarchs entertained a deceitful negotiation; and such was the superiority
of Chosroes, that whilst he treated the Roman ministers with insolence and
contempt, he obtained the most unprecedented honors for his own
ambassadors at the Imperial court. The successor of Cyrus assumed the
majesty of the Eastern sun, and graciously permitted his younger brother
Justinian to reign over the West, with the pale and reflected splendor of
the moon. This gigantic style was supported by the pomp and eloquence of
Isdigune, one of the royal chamberlains. His wife and daughters, with a
train of eunuchs and camels, attended the march of the ambassador: two
satraps with golden diadems were numbered among his followers: he was
guarded by five hundred horse, the most valiant of the Persians; and the
Roman governor of Dara wisely refused to admit more than twenty of this
martial and hostile caravan. When Isdigune had saluted the emperor, and
delivered his presents, he passed ten months at Constantinople without
discussing any serious affairs. Instead of being confined to his palace,
and receiving food and water from the hands of his keepers, the Persian
ambassador, without spies or guards, was allowed to visit the capital; and
the freedom of conversation and trade enjoyed by his domestics, offended
the prejudices of an age which rigorously practised the law of nations,
without confidence or courtesy. <SPAN href="#link42note-89"
name="link42noteref-89" id="link42noteref-89">89</SPAN> By an unexampled
indulgence, his interpreter, a servant below the notice of a Roman
magistrate, was seated, at the table of Justinian, by the side of his
master: and one thousand pounds of gold might be assigned for the expense
of his journey and entertainment. Yet the repeated labors of Isdigune
could procure only a partial and imperfect truce, which was always
purchased with the treasures, and renewed at the solicitation, of the
Byzantine court Many years of fruitless desolation elapsed before
Justinian and Chosroes were compelled, by mutual lassitude, to consult the
repose of their declining age. At a conference held on the frontier, each
party, without expecting to gain credit, displayed the power, the justice,
and the pacific intentions, of their respective sovereigns; but necessity
and interest dictated the treaty of peace, which was concluded for a term
of fifty years, diligently composed in the Greek and Persian languages,
and attested by the seals of twelve interpreters. The liberty of commerce
and religion was fixed and defined; the allies of the emperor and the
great king were included in the same benefits and obligations; and the
most scrupulous precautions were provided to prevent or determine the
accidental disputes that might arise on the confines of two hostile
nations. After twenty years of destructive though feeble war, the limits
still remained without alteration; and Chosroes was persuaded to renounce
his dangerous claim to the possession or sovereignty of Colchos and its
dependent states. Rich in the accumulated treasures of the East, he
extorted from the Romans an annual payment of thirty thousand pieces of
gold; and the smallness of the sum revealed the disgrace of a tribute in
its naked deformity. In a previous debate, the chariot of Sesostris, and
the wheel of fortune, were applied by one of the ministers of Justinian,
who observed that the reduction of Antioch, and some Syrian cities, had
elevated beyond measure the vain and ambitious spirit of the Barbarian.
"You are mistaken," replied the modest Persian: "the king of kings, the
lord of mankind, looks down with contempt on such petty acquisitions; and
of the ten nations, vanquished by his invincible arms, he esteems the
Romans as the least formidable." <SPAN href="#link42note-90"
name="link42noteref-90" id="link42noteref-90">90</SPAN> According to the
Orientals, the empire of Nushirvan extended from Ferganah, in Transoxiana,
to Yemen or Arabia Faelix. He subdued the rebels of Hyrcania, reduced the
provinces of Cabul and Zablestan on the banks of the Indus, broke the
power of the Euthalites, terminated by an honorable treaty the Turkish
war, and admitted the daughter of the great khan into the number of his
lawful wives. Victorious and respected among the princes of Asia, he gave
audience, in his palace of Madain, or Ctesiphon, to the ambassadors of the
world. Their gifts or tributes, arms, rich garments, gems, slaves or
aromatics, were humbly presented at the foot of his throne; and he
condescended to accept from the king of India ten quintals of the wood of
aloes, a maid seven cubits in height, and a carpet softer than silk, the
skin, as it was reported, of an extraordinary serpent. <SPAN href="#link42note-91" name="link42noteref-91" id="link42noteref-91">91</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-89" id="link42note-89">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
89 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-89">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Procopius represents
the practice of the Gothic court of Ravenna (Goth. l. i. c. 7;) and
foreign ambassadors have been treated with the same jealousy and rigor in
Turkey, (Busbequius, epist. iii. p. 149, 242, &c.,) Russia, (Voyage
D'Olearius,) and China, (Narrative of A. de Lange, in Bell's Travels, vol.
ii. p. 189—311.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-90" id="link42note-90">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
90 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-90">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The negotiations and
treaties between Justinian and Chosroes are copiously explained by
Procopius, (Persie, l. ii. c. 10, 13, 26, 27, 28. Gothic. l. ii. c. 11,
15,) Agathias, (l. iv. p. 141, 142,) and Menander, (in Excerpt. Legat. p.
132—147.) Consult Barbeyrac, Hist. des Anciens Traites, tom. ii. p.
154, 181—184, 193—200.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-91" id="link42note-91">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
91 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-91">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ D'Herbelot, Bibliot.
Orient. p. 680, 681, 294, 295.]</p>
<p>Justinian had been reproached for his alliance with the Aethiopians, as if
he attempted to introduce a people of savage negroes into the system of
civilized society. But the friends of the Roman empire, the Axumites, or
Abyssinians, may be always distinguished from the original natives of
Africa. <SPAN href="#link42note-92" name="link42noteref-92" id="link42noteref-92">92</SPAN> The hand of nature has flattened the noses of
the negroes, covered their heads with shaggy wool, and tinged their skin
with inherent and indelible blackness. But the olive complexion of the
Abyssinians, their hair, shape, and features, distinctly mark them as a
colony of Arabs; and this descent is confirmed by the resemblance of
language and manners the report of an ancient emigration, and the narrow
interval between the shores of the Red Sea. Christianity had raised that
nation above the level of African barbarism: <SPAN href="#link42note-93"
name="link42noteref-93" id="link42noteref-93">93</SPAN> their intercourse
with Egypt, and the successors of Constantine, <SPAN href="#link42note-94"
name="link42noteref-94" id="link42noteref-94">94</SPAN> had communicated the
rudiments of the arts and sciences; their vessels traded to the Isle of
Ceylon, <SPAN href="#link42note-95" name="link42noteref-95" id="link42noteref-95">95</SPAN> and seven kingdoms obeyed the Negus or
supreme prince of Abyssinia. The independence of the Homerites, <SPAN href="#link42note-9511" name="link42noteref-9511" id="link42noteref-9511">9511</SPAN>
who reigned in the rich and happy Arabia, was first violated by an
Aethiopian conqueror: he drew his hereditary claim from the queen of
Sheba, <SPAN href="#link42note-96" name="link42noteref-96" id="link42noteref-96">96</SPAN> and his ambition was sanctified by religious
zeal. The Jews, powerful and active in exile, had seduced the mind of
Dunaan, prince of the Homerites. They urged him to retaliate the
persecution inflicted by the Imperial laws on their unfortunate brethren:
some Roman merchants were injuriously treated; and several Christians of
Negra <SPAN href="#link42note-97" name="link42noteref-97" id="link42noteref-97">97</SPAN> were honored with the crown of martyrdom. <SPAN href="#link42note-98" name="link42noteref-98" id="link42noteref-98">98</SPAN>
The churches of Arabia implored the protection of the Abyssinian monarch.
The Negus passed the Red Sea with a fleet and army, deprived the Jewish
proselyte of his kingdom and life, and extinguished a race of princes, who
had ruled above two thousand years the sequestered region of myrrh and
frankincense. The conqueror immediately announced the victory of the
gospel, requested an orthodox patriarch, and so warmly professed his
friendship to the Roman empire, that Justinian was flattered by the hope
of diverting the silk trade through the channel of Abyssinia, and of
exciting the forces of Arabia against the Persian king. Nonnosus,
descended from a family of ambassadors, was named by the emperor to
execute this important commission. He wisely declined the shorter, but
more dangerous, road, through the sandy deserts of Nubia; ascended the
Nile, embarked on the Red Sea, and safely landed at the African port of
Adulis. From Adulis to the royal city of Axume is no more than fifty
leagues, in a direct line; but the winding passes of the mountains
detained the ambassador fifteen days; and as he traversed the forests, he
saw, and vaguely computed, about five thousand wild elephants. The
capital, according to his report, was large and populous; and the village
of Axume is still conspicuous by the regal coronations, by the ruins of a
Christian temple, and by sixteen or seventeen obelisks inscribed with
Grecian characters. <SPAN href="#link42note-99" name="link42noteref-99" id="link42noteref-99">99</SPAN> But the Negus <SPAN href="#link42note-9911"
name="link42noteref-9911" id="link42noteref-9911">9911</SPAN> gave audience
in the open field, seated on a lofty chariot, which was drawn by four
elephants, superbly caparisoned, and surrounded by his nobles and
musicians. He was clad in a linen garment and cap, holding in his hand two
javelins and a light shield; and, although his nakedness was imperfectly
covered, he displayed the Barbaric pomp of gold chains, collars, and
bracelets, richly adorned with pearls and precious stones. The ambassador
of Justinian knelt; the Negus raised him from the ground, embraced
Nonnosus, kissed the seal, perused the letter, accepted the Roman
alliance, and, brandishing his weapons, denounced implacable war against
the worshipers of fire. But the proposal of the silk trade was eluded; and
notwithstanding the assurances, and perhaps the wishes, of the
Abyssinians, these hostile menaces evaporated without effect. The
Homerites were unwilling to abandon their aromatic groves, to explore a
sandy desert, and to encounter, after all their fatigues, a formidable
nation from whom they had never received any personal injuries. Instead of
enlarging his conquests, the king of Aethiopia was incapable of defending
his possessions. Abrahah, <SPAN href="#link42note-9912"
name="link42noteref-9912" id="link42noteref-9912">9912</SPAN> the slave of a
Roman merchant of Adulis, assumed the sceptre of the Homerites,; the
troops of Africa were seduced by the luxury of the climate; and Justinian
solicited the friendship of the usurper, who honored with a slight tribute
the supremacy of his prince. After a long series of prosperity, the power
of Abrahah was overthrown before the gates of Mecca; and his children were
despoiled by the Persian conqueror; and the Aethiopians were finally
expelled from the continent of Asia. This narrative of obscure and remote
events is not foreign to the decline and fall of the Roman empire. If a
Christian power had been maintained in Arabia, Mahomet must have been
crushed in his cradle, and Abyssinia would have prevented a revolution
which has changed the civil and religious state of the world. <SPAN href="#link42note-100" name="link42noteref-100" id="link42noteref-100">100</SPAN>
<SPAN href="#link42note-1001" name="link42noteref-1001" id="link42noteref-1001">1001</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-92" id="link42note-92">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
92 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-92">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See Buffon, Hist.
Naturelle, tom. iii. p. 449. This Arab cast of features and complexion,
which has continued 3400 years (Ludolph. Hist. et Comment. Aethiopic. l.
i. c. 4) in the colony of Abyssinia, will justify the suspicion, that
race, as well as climate, must have contributed to form the negroes of the
adjacent and similar regions. * Note: Mr. Salt (Travels, vol. ii. p. 458)
considers them to be distinct from the Arabs—"in feature, color,
habit, and manners."—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-93" id="link42note-93">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
93 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-93">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The Portuguese
missionaries, Alvarez, (Ramusio, tom. i. fol. 204, rect. 274, vers.)
Bermudez, (Purchas's Pilgrims, vol. ii. l. v. c. 7, p. 1149—1188,)
Lobo, (Relation, &c., par M. le Grand, with xv. Dissertations, Paris,
1728,) and Tellez (Relations de Thevenot, part iv.) could only relate of
modern Abyssinia what they had seen or invented. The erudition of
Ludolphus, (Hist. Aethiopica, Francofurt, 1681. Commentarius, 1691.
Appendix, 1694,) in twenty-five languages, could add little concerning its
ancient history. Yet the fame of Caled, or Ellisthaeus, the conqueror of
Yemen, is celebrated in national songs and legends.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-94" id="link42note-94">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
94 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-94">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The negotiations of
Justinian with the Axumites, or Aethiopians, are recorded by Procopius
(Persic. l. i. c. 19, 20) and John Malala, (tom. ii. p. 163—165, 193—196.)
The historian of Antioch quotes the original narrative of the ambassador
Nonnosus, of which Photius (Bibliot. Cod. iii.) has preserved a curious
extract.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-95" id="link42note-95">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
95 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-95">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The trade of the
Axumites to the coast of India and Africa, and the Isle of Ceylon, is
curiously represented by Cosmas Indicopleustes, (Topograph. Christian. l.
ii. p. 132, 138, 139, 140, l. xi. p. 338, 339.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-9511" id="link42note-9511">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
9511 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-9511">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ It appears by the
important inscription discovered by Mr. Salt at Axoum, and from a law of
Constantius, (16th Jan. 356, inserted in the Theodosian Code, l. 12, c.
12,) that in the middle of the fourth century of our era the princes of
the Axumites joined to their titles that of king of the Homerites. The
conquests which they made over the Arabs in the sixth century were only a
restoration of the ancient order of things. St. Martin vol. viii. p. 46—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-96" id="link42note-96">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
96 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-96">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Ludolph. Hist. et
Comment. Aethiop. l. ii. c. 3.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-97" id="link42note-97">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
97 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-97">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The city of Negra, or
Nag'ran, in Yemen, is surrounded with palm-trees, and stands in the high
road between Saana, the capital, and Mecca; from the former ten, from the
latter twenty days' journey of a caravan of camels, (Abulfeda, Descript.
Arabiae, p. 52.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-98" id="link42note-98">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
98 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-98">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The martyrdom of St.
Arethas, prince of Negra, and his three hundred and forty companions, is
embellished in the legends of Metaphrastes and Nicephorus Callistus,
copied by Baronius, (A. D 522, No. 22—66, A.D. 523, No. 16—29,)
and refuted with obscure diligence, by Basnage, (Hist. des Juifs, tom.
viii. l. xii. c. ii. p. 333—348,) who investigates the state of the
Jews in Arabia and Aethiopia. * Note: According to Johannsen, (Hist.
Yemanae, Praef. p. 89,) Dunaan (Ds Nowas) massacred 20,000 Christians, and
threw them into a pit, where they were burned. They are called in the
Koran the companions of the pit (socii foveae.)—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-99" id="link42note-99">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
99 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-99">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Alvarez (in Ramusio,
tom. i. fol. 219, vers. 221, vers.) saw the flourishing state of Axume in
the year 1520—luogomolto buono e grande. It was ruined in the same
century by the Turkish invasion. No more than 100 houses remain; but the
memory of its past greatness is preserved by the regal coronation,
(Ludolph. Hist. et Comment. l. ii. c. 11.) * Note: Lord Valentia's and Mr.
Salt's Travels give a high notion of the ruins of Axum.—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-9911" id="link42note-9911">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
9911 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-9911">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The Negus is
differently called Elesbaan, Elesboas, Elisthaeus, probably the same name,
or rather appellation. See St. Martin, vol. viii. p. 49.—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-9912" id="link42note-9912">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
9912 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-9912">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ According to the
Arabian authorities, (Johannsen, Hist. Yemanae, p. 94, Bonn, 1828,)
Abrahah was an Abyssinian, the rival of Ariathus, the brother of the
Abyssinian king: he surprised and slew Ariathus, and by his craft appeased
the resentment of Nadjash, the Abyssinian king. Abrahah was a Christian;
he built a magnificent church at Sana, and dissuaded his subjects from
their accustomed pilgrimages to Mecca. The church was defiled, it was
supposed, by the Koreishites, and Abrahah took up arms to revenge himself
on the temple at Mecca. He was repelled by miracle: his elephant would not
advance, but knelt down before the sacred place; Abrahah fled, discomfited
and mortally wounded, to Sana—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-100" id="link42note-100">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
100 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-100">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The revolutions of
Yemen in the sixth century must be collected from Procopius, (Persic. l.
i. c. 19, 20,) Theophanes Byzant., (apud Phot. cod. lxiii. p. 80,) St.
Theophanes, (in Chronograph. p. 144, 145, 188, 189, 206, 207, who is full
of strange blunders,) Pocock, (Specimen Hist. Arab. p. 62, 65,)
D'Herbelot, (Bibliot. Orientale, p. 12, 477,) and Sale's Preliminary
Discourse and Koran, (c. 105.) The revolt of Abrahah is mentioned by
Procopius; and his fall, though clouded with miracles, is an historical
fact. Note: To the authors who have illustrated the obscure history of the
Jewish and Abyssinian kingdoms in Homeritis may be added Schultens, Hist.
Joctanidarum; Walch, Historia rerum in Homerite gestarum, in the 4th vol.
of the Gottingen Transactions; Salt's Travels, vol. ii. p. 446, &c.:
Sylvestre de Sacy, vol. i. Acad. des Inscrip. Jost, Geschichte der
Israeliter; Johannsen, Hist. Yemanae; St. Martin's notes to Le Beau, t.
vii p. 42.—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link42note-1001" id="link42note-1001">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
1001 (<SPAN href="#link42noteref-1001">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ A period of
sixty-seven years is assigned by most of the Arabian authorities to the
Abyssinian kingdoms in Homeritis.—M.]</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />