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Ancient Byzantium Modern name is Constantinople, an Istanbul Greek city. Ancient Byzantium was less important than Chalcedon in the early Roman Empire, although it flourished after Rome offered protection to the people there. Later in the 4th century AD Constantinopolis was made the capital of the eastern Roman empire by Constantine.
Byzantium (Βυζάντιον). A celebrated city of Thrace, on the shore of
the Thracian Bosporus, called at a later period Constantinopolis, and made the
capital of the Eastern Empire of the Romans. It was founded by a Dorian colony
from Megara, or, rather, by a Megarian colony in conjunction with a Thracian
prince. For Byzas, whom the city acknowledged, and celebrated in a festival as
its founder, was, according to the legend, a son of Poseidon and Cero�ssa the
daughter of Io, and ruled over all the adjacent country. The early commerce of
Megara was directed principally to the shores of the Propontis, and this people
had founded Chalcedon seventeen years before Byzantium, and Selymbria even prior
to Chalcedon (Herod.iv. 144). When, however, their trade was extended still
farther to the north, and had reached the shores of the Euxine, the harbour of
Chalcedon sank in importance, and a commercial station was required on the
opposite side of the strait. This station was Byzantium. The appellation of
�blind men� given to the Chalcedonians by the Persian general Megabazus (Herod.iv.
144), for having overlooked the superior site where Byzantium was afterwards
founded, does not therefore appear to have been well merited. As long as
Chalcedon was the northernmost point reached by the commerce of Megara, its
situation was preferable to any offered by the opposite side of the Bosporus,
because the current on this latter side runs down from the north more strongly
than it does on the side of Chalcedon, and the harbour of this city, therefore,
is more accessible to vessels coming from the south. On the other hand,
Byzantium was far superior to Chalcedon for the northern trade, since the
current that set in strongly from the Euxine carried vessels directly into the
harbour of Byzantium, but prevented their approach to Chalcedon in a straight
course (Polyb. iv. 43). The harbour of Byzantium was peculiarly favoured by
nature, being deep, capacious, and sheltered from every storm. From its shape,
and the rich advantages thus connected with it, the harbour of Byzantium
obtained the name of Chrysoceras, or �the Golden Horn,� which was also applied
to the promontory or neck of land that contributed to form it. And yet,
notwithstanding all these advantages, Byzantium remained for a long time an
inconsiderable town. The declining commerce of Megara, and the character which
Byzantium still sustained of being a half-barbarian place, may serve to account
for this.
At a subsequent period, the Milesians sent hither a strong colony, and so
altered for the better the aspect of things that they are regarded by some
ancient writers as the founders of the city itself. When, at a later day, the
insurrection of the Asiatic Greeks had been crushed by Darius, and the Persian
fleet was reducing to obedience the Greek cities along the Hellespont and the
Propontis, the Byzantines, together with a body of Chalcedonians, would not wait
for the coming of the Persians, but, leaving their habitations, and fleeing to
the Euxine, built the city of Mesembria on the upper coast of Thrace (Herod.vi.
33). The Persians destroyed the empty city, and no Byzantium for some time
thereafter existed. This will explain why Seylax, in his Periplus, passed by
Byzantium in silence, while he mentions all the Grecian settlements in this
quarter, and among them even Mesembria itself.
Byzantium reappeared after the overthrow of Xerxes, some of the old inhabitants
having probably returned; and here Pausanias, the commander of the Grecian
forces, took up his quarters (B.C. 479). He gave the city a code of laws, and a
government modelled, in some degree, after the Spartan form, and hence he was
regarded by some as the true founder of the city. The Athenians succeeding to
the hegemony, Byzantium fell under their control, and received so many important
additions from them that Ammianus Marcellinus, in a later age, calls it an Attic
colony (xxii. 8). The city, however, was a Doric one, in language, customs, and
laws, and remained so even after the Athenians had the control of it. The
maintenance of this military post became of great importance to the Greeks
during their warfare with the Persians in subsequent years, and this
circumstance, together with the advantages of a lucrative and now continually
increasing commerce, gave Byzantium a high rank among Grecian cities. After
Athens and Sparta had weakened the power of each other by national rivalry, and
neither could lay claim to the empire of the sea, Byzantium became an
independent city, and turned its whole attention to commerce. Its strong
situation enabled it, at a subsequent period, to resist successfully the arms of
Philip of Macedon; nor did Alexander, in his eagerness to march into Asia, make
any attempt upon the place. It preserved also a neutral character under his
successors. The great evil to which the city of Byzantium was exposed came from
the inland country, the Thracian tribes continually making incursions into the
fertile territory around the place, and carrying off more or less of the
products of the fields. The city suffered severely also from the Gauls, being
compelled to pay a yearly tribute amounting at least to eighty talents.
After the departure of the Gauls it again became a flourishing place, but its
most prosperous period was during the Roman sway. It had thrown itself into the
arms of the Romans as early as the war against the younger Philip of Macedon,
and enjoyed from that people not only complete protection, but also many
valuable commercial privileges. It was allowed, moreover, to lay a toll on all
vessels passing through the straits�a thing which had been attempted before
without success�and this toll it shared with the Romans. But the day of
misfortune at length came. In the contest for the Empire between Severus and
Niger, Byzantium declared for the latter, and stood a siege in consequence which
continued long after Niger's overthrow and death. After three years of almost
incredible exertions the place surrendered to Severus. The few remaining
inhabitants whom famine had spared were sold as slaves, the city was razed to
the ground, its territory given to Perinthus, and a small village took the place
of the great commercial emporium. Repenting soon after of what he had done,
Severus rebuilt Byzantium, and adorned it with numerous and splendid buildings,
which in a later age still bore his name; but it never recovered its former rank
until the days of Constantine. Constantine had no great affection for Rome as a
city, nor had the inhabitants any great regard for him. He felt the necessity,
moreover, of having the capital of the Empire in some more central quarter, from
which the movements of the German tribes on the one hand, and those of the
Persians on the other, might be observed. He long sought for such a locality,
and believed at one time that he had found it in the neighbourhood of the
Sigaean promontory, on the coast of Troas. He had even commenced building here
when the superior advantages of Byzantium as a centre of empire attracted his
attention, and he finally resolved to make this the capital of the Roman world.
For a monarchy possessing the western portion of Asia and the largest part of
Europe, together with the whole coast of the Mediterranean Sea, nature herself
seemed to have destined Byzantium as a capital.
Constantine's plan was carried into rapid execution (A.D. 330). The ancient city
had possessed a circuit of forty stadia, and covered merely two hills, one close
to the water, on which the Seraglio at present stands, and another adjoining it,
and extending towards the interior to what is now the Besestan, or great market.
The new city, called Constantinopolis, or �City of Constantine,� was three times
as large, and covered four hills, together with part of a fifth, having a
circuit of somewhat less than fourteen geographical miles. Every effort was made
to embellish this new capital of the Roman world: the most splendid edifices
were erected, including an imperial palace, numerous residences for the chief
officers of the court, churches, baths, a hippodrome; and inhabitants were
procured from every quarter. Its rapid increase called, from time to time, for a
corresponding enlargement of the city, until, in the reign of Theodosius II.,
when the new walls were erected (the previous ones having been thrown down by an
earthquake), Constantinople attained to the size which it at present has.
Chalcondylas supposes the walls of the city to be 111 stadia in circumference;
Gyllius, about 13 Italian miles; but, according to the best modern plans of
Constantinople, it is not less than 19,700 yards. The number of gates is
twentyeight�fourteen on the side of the port, seven towards the land, and as
many on the Propontis. The city is built on a triangular promontory, and the
number of hills which it covers is seven. Besides the name of Constantinopolis (Κωνσταντίνου
πόλις), this city had also the more imposing one of New Rome (Νέα Ῥώμη), which,
however, gradually fell into disuse. According to some, the peasants in the
neighbourhood, while they repair to Constantinople, say in corrupt Greek that
they are going es tam bolin (i.e. ἐς τὰν πόλιν), �to the city,� whence has
arisen the Turkish name of the place, Stamboul. Constantinople was taken by the
Turks under Mohammed II. on the 29th of May, A.D. 1453. See
Byzantinum Imperium;
Constantinus. - Harpers Dictionary of
Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers.
CONSTANTINO�POLIS the capital of the Lower Empire, and founded by Constantine the Great on the site of the ancient Byzantium.
I. HISTORY OF BYZANTIUM.
Byzantium (Βυζάντιον: Eth. Βυζάντιος, Byzantius: Adj. Βυζαντιακός, Βυζαντιάς, Βυζαντίς, Βυζαντιανός, Βυζαντειανός). The foundation of this city was ascribed to the Megarians in B.C. 667, a few years later than its neighbour Chalcedon (Euseb. Chron.; Clinton, F.H. vol. i. p. 194) on the site of a town called Lygos (Plin. Nat. 4.18; Auson. Clar. Urb. 13.). In B.C. 628 a second colony was sent out from Megaris under Zeuxippus. (Lydus de Mag. Rom. 3.70; Clinton, F. H. vol. i. p. 208.) The transmission of the worship of Hera (whose temple both here and at Argos was on the citadel), and the traditions concerning lo confirm the general assertion of Hesychius of Miletus that the Argives had a share in the foundation of the city. (M�ller, Dor. vol. i. p. 133. trans.) Byzantium was situated at the apex of the triangle which faces the shores of Asia, and meets the waters of the Thracian Bosporus. The oracle of Apollo which commanded the colonists to build their new city opposite to the �land of the blind,� alluding to the superiority of the site of Byzantium to that of Chalcedon (Hdt. 4.144; Strab. vii. p.320; Tac. Ann. 12.63) did not compromise the infallibility of the Pythoness by its advice. Few cities could boast so magnificent a position: commanding the two opposite shores of Europe and Asia, it united the advantages of security and great facilities for trade, with the choicest gifts of nature, and the most strikingly picturesque scenery. (Plb. 4.39; Zosim. 2.30.) On the S. it was bathed by the waters of the Propontis, on the N. by those of the Golden Horn (τὸ κέρας). The river Lycus poured into this arm of the Bosporus a perpetual stream of fresh water, which cleansed the bottom, and afforded a retreat for the periodical shoals of fish, especially of the Pelamys kind, which come down from the Palus Macotis, and round by the E. and S. coast of the Euxine into the channel (Strab. l.c.). This fishery employed and supported a large number of the poorer class of freemen. (Arist. Pol. 4.4.1.) The fish was salted and became an article of considerable traffic, and the harbour obtained its epithet of golden from the riches derived from this source. (Plin. Nat. 9.20.) The port, which is about 7 miles in length, was both secure, and capacious; and as the tide is scarcely felt, the constant depth of the water allowed vessels to land their goods conveniently, as the largest ships might rest their heads against the houses, while their sterns float in the water. (Procop. de Aed. 1.5.) As the key of the Euxine and the Aegean no vessel could pass from the one sea to the other without the leave of the people of Byzantium, who gained a considerable revenue from the duties they levied on the corn-ships which passed in and out from the Euxine. (Plb. 4.38.)
In the reign of Dareius Hystaspis, Byzantium was taken by
Otanes, general of the forces on the coast of Thrace. (Hdt. 5.26.) Afterwards,
it sided with the Ionians in their revolt (Hdt. 5.103), but on the arrival of
the Phoenician fleet the inhabitants, without even waiting for it, fled to
Mesambria. (Hdt. 6.33.) Pausanias, after the battle of Plataea, wrested it from
the Medes. (Thuc. 1.94.) And hence Justin (9.1.3) calls him the founder of
Byzantium. After an interval of 7 years Cimon obtained it for the Athenians. (Diod.
11.60; Plut. Cim. 5; Thuc. 1.131.) In 440, the Byzantines joined the Samians and
revolted from Athens, but afterwards submitted. (Thuc. 1.117.) In 416, in common
with the Chalcedonians, they made an expedition into Bithynia, and perpetrated
great cruelties. (Diod. 12.82.) In 408, Byzantium was besieged by the united
forces of the Athenians under Alcibiades, a wall of circumvallation was drawn
around it, and various attacks made by missiles and battering engines. These had
no effect upon the Lacedaemonian garrison; but when the blockade was strictly
kept up, and the population were dying of hunger, in the absence of Clearchus
the Spartan commander, Cydon and a Byzantine party opened the gates by night and
admitted the Athenians into the wide inner square called the Thrakion.
Favourable terms were granted to the town, which was replaced in its condition
of a dependent ally upon Athens. (Xen. Hell. 1.3. 15-22; Diod. 13.67; Plut. Alc.
31; Frontin. 3.2.3; Polyaen. 1.48.2.) In 405, after the battle of Aegos-Potami,
Lysander recaptured Byzantium, and placed Sthenelaus there as �harmost� with a
garrison (Xen. Hell. 2.2. 2). It was under the power of the Lacedaemonians when
the Ten Thousand made their retreat; in consequence of the fraud and harsh
dealing of the Admiral Anaxibius, the soldiers were exasperated, became masters
of the town, and Byzantium would have been sacked had it not been for the energy
and eloquence of Xenophon. (Anab. vii. 1. � � 5--32.) In 390, Thrasybulus
changed the government of Byzantium, which was already in alliance with Athens,
from an oligarchy into a democracy, and sold the tenths of the merchant vessels
sailing out of the Euxine. (Xen. Hell. 4.8. 25-27.) In 363, Epaminondas visited
Byzantium, drove off Laches with the Athenian squadron, and prevailed upon
several of the allies of Athens to declare in his favour. (Isocr. Orat. v.
Philip. 53; Diod. 15.79.) [1.658] In 356, Byzantium, along with Rhodes and
Chios, united with the newly-flourishing commonwealth of Cos, and Mausolus king
of Caria, in an endeavour to throw off the Athenian dominion: an engagement
which was to have taken place by sea, was prevented by a storm. (Diod. 16.21.)
In 340, the Athenians, urged on by Demosthenes, sent succours to Byzantium,
which was besieged by Philip; the combined fleet under the command of Chares met
Amyntas and the Macedonian ships, and were defeated. In the following year
Chares was superseded by Phocion, when the Athenians behaved with such
moderation to their allies, and showed so much courage against the besiegers,
that Philip was compelled to raise the siege. (Diod. 16.77; Plut. Phoc. 14.)
During this memorable attack, on a dark night when the Macedonians were on the
point of seizing upon the town, a light appeared in the heavens and revealed to
the inhabitants their danger. (Steph. B. sub voce Βόσπορος; Eustath. ad Dionys.
143.) Hesychius the Milesian, who tells the same story, adds that an image in
honour of this interference was erected to Torch-bearing Hecate. The
crescent,which is found on Byzantine coins (Mionnet, Descr. des Med. vol. i. p.
378), and which was adopted by the Turks as their device after the capture of
Constantinople (comp. Von Hammer, Gesch. der Osman, vol. i. p. 93) is supposed
to commemorate the portent. This repulse to the successful career of Philip was
one of the proudest feats of the great orator, and in his speech upon the crown
Demosthenes often recurs to it. The Byzantines, in gratitude for the valuable
assistance they had received, decreed to the Athenians the right of isopolity,
the extraordinary privilege of precedence at games and public ceremonies, with
exemption from compulsory �liturgies.� The decree. which with all the original
Dorisms is preserved in Demosthenes (de Cor. p. 255), directed that in perpetual
memory of the benefit, 3 statues each 16 cubits high, representing the people of
Byzantium and Perinthus crowning the Athenians, should be placed in a public
part of the city.
The Byzantines were afterwards engaged in perpetual warfare with the
neighbouring barbarians, and were unable to keep them off either by resistance
or tribute. To crown the other evils of war, their harvests were either carried
off or destroyed by the enemy, till, in 279, they agreed to pay the Gauls a
yearly tribute of 3000, 5000, and 10,000 pieces of gold, and at last the large
sum of 80 talents, on condition that their lands should not be ravaged. (Plb.
4.46; Liv. 38.16; B�ckh, Econ. of Athens, p. 595, trans.) Their sufferings in
this respect compelled them to have recourse to many extraordinary measures for
procuring money, and finally to the imposition of the transit duties which
involved them in the war with Rhodes. Still, during this time, while suffering
the penalty of Tantalus (Polyb. l.c.), they enjoyed municipal independence. (Diod.
19.77.) In this war Byzantium was supported by Attalus, king of Pergamus.
Prusias, king of Bithynia, was a partizan of Rhodes, and the Byzantines
endeavoured to set up Tiboetes, an uncle of Prusias, as rival for his throne.
Prusias seized on their Asiatic possessions, while the Thracians pressed hard
upon them on the European side; and in 219 a peace, under the mediation of the
Gallo-Grecian king Cavarus, was concluded on very unfavourable terms for
Byzantium. (Plb. 4.46-52.) While Rome was contending against the pseudo-Philip
of Macedon, Antiochus, and Mithridates, it granted to Byzantium, for good
services rendered on the occasion, the rank of a free and confederate city.
Disputes arose, and an appeal was made to Rome, which resulted in a decree,
proposed by Clodius, and put in force by Piso, who exhibited himself rather as a
conqueror than an ally and magistrate. (Cic. de Prov. Consul. 2-4; Tac. Ann.
12.62.) It appears that Claudius remitted the tribute Byzantium had to pay, for
five years, in consequence of the losses of the Thracian war (Tac. Ann. 12.63),
and that Vespasian stripped it of its privileges, and reduced it to the
condition of a Roman province. (Suet. Vesp. 8.) In the civil wars between
Severus and Pescennius Niger, Byzantium took the part of the latter, and, after
a resistance of three years, was taken in 196. Severus treated the inhabitants
with his usual indifference to human life or suffering. The famous walls of
massive square stones, so well fastened together by iron bolts that the whole
seemed to be one block, were levelled with the earth. The soldiers and
magistrates were put to death, the property of the citizens confiscated, and the
town itself, deprived of all political existence (τὸ ἀξίωμα τὸ πολιτικόν), made
over to the Perinthians. (D. C. 74.6-14; Herodian, 3.1--7; Zosim. 1.8.) Severus
afterwards relented, and, visiting Byzantium, embellished the town with
magnificent baths, porticoes round the Hippodrome, and other buildings. The name
of Augusta Antonina was given it, in honour of Antoninus Bassianus. (Suid. s. v.
Σεβῆος; Zosim. 2.30; Cedren. p. 252.) Caracalla restored to the inhabitants
their rights and franchises. (Spartian. Caracall. 1.) It is remarked by Gibbon
(Decl. and Fall, vol. i. p. 205), that the charge against Severus of having
deprived the Roman people of the strongest bulwark against the barbarians of
Pontus and Asia, was but too well justified when, in the succeeding age, the
fleets of the Goths covered the Euxine, and passed through the undefended
Bosporus into the centre of the Mediterranean. The soldiers of Gallienus
massacred most of the citizens, and not one old family remained in later times,
except those who had previously left the town. (Trebell. Poll. Gallien. 6.)
Under Claudius II. the remainder of the Byzantines fought bravely against the
Goths. (Trebell. Poll. Claud. 9.) In the civil wars which succeeded the
abdication of Diocletian, the fortifications of Byzantium had been strengthened:
Licinius, after the battle of Adrianople, retired to this stronghold;
Constantine pursued the siege so vigorously, by constructing mounds of an equal
height with the ramparts, and erecting towers upon their foundation, from which
the besieged were galled by large stones and darts hurled by engines, that the
town at length surrendered.
The constitution of Byzantium was at first royal; though there is some doubt
about this, as Hesychius the Milesian calls Dineus general of the Byzantines. (M�ller,
Dor. vol. ii. p. 174, trans.) It afterwards became an aristocracy,--the native
inhabitants, the Bithynians, being in precisely the same condition as' the
Helots. (Phylarch. ap. Athen. 6.271.) The oligarchy which succeeded was, in 390,
changed into a democracy by Thrasybulus the Athenian; and equal privileges were
at the same time probably granted to the new citizens, who, on account of their
demands, had been driven from the city by the ancient colonists. (Arist. Pol.
5.2.10.) After this the democracy seems to have continued for a long time. (Theopomp.
ap. Athen. 12.526.) In the document quoted by Demosthenes (de Cor. l.c.) [1.659]
the senate (βωλά) transfers a decree in its first stage (ῥήτρα) to an
individual, in order to bring it before an assembly of the people (ἁλία). The
office of Hieromnamon occurs in decrees (Dem. l.c.; Plb. 4.52) and on coins, as
also does that of Archon, which probably came in with the democracy. From the
habit of the townspeople passing their time in the market-place and harbour, and
the number of foreign and native traders who resorted to it, Byzantium displayed
the usual characteristics of a large seaport town. They were an idle luxurious
race, spending their days in the numerous public-houses, where the excellent
wine which was furnished by Maronea and other regions, offered great
temptations. They not only tippled in taverns, but also fed like gluttons,
according to Diphilus (ap. Athen. 4.132). They devoured such quantities of young
tunnies that their whole frame became well nigh glutinous, and it was thought
they would have been absorbed in mucilage. To sustain their valour, which took
fright at the sound of a trumpet, the general, Leo or Leonidas, was obliged
during the siege of Philip of Macedon to allow cook-shops and canteens to be
established along the ramparts. (Athen. 10.442; Aelian, 3.14; Muller, Dor. vol.
ii. p. 411, trans.) A democracy of such boon companions was not, as may be
supposed, very orderly, and seems to have acted upon the �laissez faire�
principle enounced by a certain Byzantine demagogue who, when he was asked what
the law enjoined, replied, �whatever I please.� (Sext. Empir. adv. Rhet. � 37.)
Iron money was coined at Byzantium for the home circulation, that the silver
might be used for foreign trade and the purposes of war. It was current in the
Peloponnesian war, and bore the Doric name Sidareos (Aristoph. Cl. 250; Pollux,
7.106, 9.78; Hesych. sub voce B�ckh, Econ. Ath. p. 596, trans.). None of this
iron money is now extant. For coins of this city, see Eckhel, vol. ii. p. 26;
Rasche, vol. i. p. 1636: Bandur. vol. ii. p. 456.
The dialect of the district appears to have contained many Dorisms. (Dem. 1. c.;
Chandler, Inscript. Append. p. 95.)
The origin of the Byzantine church is somewhat uncertain: the modern Greeks, in
their zeal not to yield to the Latins the advantage of antiquity, attribute its
foundation to the Apostle St. Andrew. It is certain that during the time of
Severus there were many Christians at Byzantium. (Le Quien, Orient. Christ. vol.
i. pp. 8, 196; Tertull. ad Scapul. 100.3; Le Beau, Bas Emp. vol. i. p. 300.)
Ancient Byzantium was situated on the first of the seven hills upon which,
rising one above another, the modern city stands; but its area occupied more
than the first region of the later town. In all probability it extended over the
three regions which lie behind the triangular space now filled by the Seraglio.
According to Dionysius of Byzantium, its circumference was 40 stadia. (Comp.
Zosim. 2.30; Gyllius, de Top. Const. 1.2.)
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II. FOUNDATION OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
It was upon this gently sloping promontory, which serves as a connecting link
between the Eastern and the Western world, and which nature has intended for the
centre of a great monarchy, that Constantine, after determining to remove the
seat of empire from the banks of the Tiber, determined to fix the city which
bore the name of its founder. The modern European, as well as the Arabic (Constanije)
name of the city, preserves the memory of the first emperor of the East. The
Turkish Istambul or Stambul, is a corruption of the Greek εἰς τὴν πόλιν. Like
the ancient mistress of the world, its foundations were to be laid upon seven
hills, and the emperor called it the NEW ROME,--a title which he confirmed by a
law, engraved on a column of marble, in a place called the Strategion; but,
however much his capital might outwardly resemble the elder Rome, it was not
permitted to bear the name of the Eternal City.
The foundations of the city were laid according to an Imperial edict (Theodos.
Cod. 13.5. s. 7), in obedience to the commands of Heaven. On foot with a lance
in his hand, the emperor led a stately procession which was to mark the
boundaries of Constantinople. As he did not pause, the attendants, astonished at
the enormous size of the future capital, asked him how far he intended to
advance. Constantine replied �when HE that goes before me shall stop.� (Philostorg.
2.9.) At a later period, the honour of having inspired the choice of a founder
was attributed to the Virgin Mother, who became the tutelary guardian of the
city. Constantinople arose, if not a Christian, certainly not a Pagan city. The
ceremonial of the dedication exhibited that strange compound of religions of
which Constantine himself was a type. After a most splendid exhibition of
chariot games in the Hippodrome, the emperor was carried in a magnificent car
through the most public part of the city, surrounded by his guards, in the
attire of some religious ceremonial with torches in their hands. The emperor
bore a golden statue of the Fortune of the city in his hands. The rites of
inauguration lasted forty days, though the 11th of May, A.D. 330, is considered
as the birth-day of the city.
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III. EXTENT, LIMITS, AND POPULATION.
The walls of Constantine across the enlarged breadth of the triangle, were begun
at a distance of 15 stadia from the old fortifications, and stretching from the
port to the Propontis, enclosed five out of the seven hills upon which the city
stood, but were not finished before the reign of Constantius. In 401, Arcadius
repaired these walls which had fallen in the earthquake that had taken place in
that year. In 413, during the minority of Theodosius II., Anthemius, the
Praetorian praefect, razed the old fortifications and built a new inclosure of
walls. In 447 this was thrown down by an earthquake, and rebuilt in three months
by the diligence of the praefect Cyrus. This double line of strong and lofty
stone walls have, except on the land side, almost disappeared, but in a
dilapidated state they still exist, extending from the port to the sea of
Marmora for about 4 English miles, presenting magnificent and picturesque
specimens of mural ruins. The wall was flanked at short intervals by towers,
mostly rectangular. The extreme length of the city at this period, and it never
to any great extent exceeded these limits, was about 3 M. P., [1.660] and the
circuit rather less than 13 M. P. The Sycae, or fig trees, formed the thirteenth
region beyond the harbour, and were much embellished by Justinian. The suburb of
Blachernae was not taken into the city till the reign of Heraclius. Constantine
had been most anxious to have his capital frequented: he summoned senators from
Rome, and, according to the vague expression of Eusebius, drained other cities
in its behalf, yet its population never became considerable when compared with
ancient Rome, and modern capitals. By far the larger part of the inhabitants
were Christians, but these were not estimated by Chrysostom (In Act. Apost. hom.
xi. vol. ix. p. 108) at more than 100,000.
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IV. HISTORY.
Were it even possible in any form which could be useful to the reader to trace
the fortunes of the Lower Empire, within the limited space of an article like
this, a sketch of Byzantine history would not fall within the province of a
work, which confines itself to the age of Grecian and Roman civilisation. But as
the topography of the city can hardly be understood without some knowledge of
the facts of the history being presupposed, it has been thought advisable to
subjoin a short summary of the most memorable events connected with
Constantinople itself.
The city of Constantine, the birth of an elder and effete age, has throughout
its long history borne the stamp of its parentage, and displayed the vices of
its original conformation. The position of the Byzantine empire is unique;
geographically it was European, but nationally it reflected the Oriental type of
character. It had indeed Roman blood, but the people who had sprung from the
loins of Mars, and were suckled by the she-wolf, gave it little but their name.
It did not speak their tongue, and was completely severed from the old
republican associations and free spirit which still survived the fall of Roman
liberty. The despotism of the court of Constantinople could not endure even the
forms of free institutions, and the relics of municipal privileges which
inherited from Rome have had so much influence in moulding the law and
constitution of modern Europe. The Caesar of the East was the counterpart of his
Moslem conqueror, and the change from the Proto Sebast to the Sultan would have
been one simply of name, had it not been for the superior energy and virtues of
the first Osmanli princes. The one like the other had his viziers, his
janissaries, his slaves, and his eunuchs alternately cajoling and tyrannizing
over prince and people. Through the dreary monotony of the history of the
Eastern empire, so deficient in moral and political interest, there are always
coming into view the characteristic features of Asiatic tyranny:--the domestic
treason,--the prince born in the purple,--the unnatural queen-mother,--the son
or the brothers murdered or blinded,--the sudden revolutions of the throne,--the
deposition of the sovereign, but the government remaining the same,--and the
people careless as to who or what their tyrant might be. Every thing by which a
people can outwardly show what is within--literature, art, and architecture,
displays the influence of the East. The literature learned, artificial, florid,
but deficient in elegance and grace, and without a spark of genius to illumine
it. The art but the figure of their ceremonial life, deficient in all deep and
sincere feeling, and showing, under the hardness of the shape, and the sameness
of the expression, the dull and slavish constraint to which it was subject. A
purer faith had indeed freed the later Greeks from the degradation of the
seraglio, had given an impulse to intellectual development, and infused a sense
of the responsibilities of power to which their Ottoman conquerors were
strangers. But even Christianity failed to reconcile the conflicting elements
and hostile influences of the East and West, and was itself penetrated by an
admixture of Oriental thought and sentiment. And in later times, after the
severance of Constantinople from the Latin Communion, the rest of Europe had no
sympathy for what was considered an alien creed. Standing in this isolated
position on the very outposts of Western civilisation, and cut off from that by
differences of language, manners, and religion, Constantinople, unable to
comprehend but rather despising that vigorous Teuton stock upon which the elder
races were engrafted, did not incorporate any of those elements which have gone
to make up the aggregate of modern Europe; while, on the other hand, it is
difficult to trace the slight reaction that the Greek empire has had upon the
West, till its fall, when it contributed so mainly to the revival of letters and
the modern spirit, by the dispersion of ancient literature and culture. Up to
A.D. 1204, Constantinople remained the capital of the E., or Lower Roman Empire:
in that year it was captured by �the blind old Dandolo� and the French. From
A.D. 1204 to 1261 it became the seat of the Latin Empire, and on the morning of
the 25th of July, 1261, reverted to the undisputed possession of the Greeks.
On the 29th of May, 1453, Constantine XIII., the last of the Palaeologi, fell
upon the walls of his capital, with the words, Θέλω θανεῖν μᾶλλον ἢ ζῆν. Since
that period it has been looked up to by the people of the East as the seat of
the supreme temporal and spiritual power, and the Sultan has become the heir of
the Caesars.
More cannot be done here than enumerate a few of the leading events of which
Constantinople itself has been the theatre during this long period of its
existence. It would be unnecessary to refer those who wish to know more on this
subject to the masterly work of Gibbon. Le Beau (Histoire du Bas Empire) is a
writer less known, and though deficient in criticism, his work contains much
information. The notes appended by St. Martin, the well-known Oriental scholar,
will be found eminently useful. The History of the Iconoclast Princes can be
read in Schlosser (Geschichte de Bilder-St�rmenden Kaiser).
The empire of the East began with the reign of Arcadius, A.D. 395. Justinian,
A.D. 527--595, has the honour of being considered the second founder of
Constantinople. In the fifth year of his reign the factions of the Circus and
the memorable sedition of the Nika almost laid the city in ashes. A description
of the buildings with which the emperor adorned his ruined capital is reserved
for the topography of the city. In 616 Chosroes maintained his camp for ten
years in the presence of the city. In 626 Heraclius delivered it from the
Persians and Avars. In 668--675, the Arabs for the first time besieged
Constantinople, but, baffled by the strength of the walls, and the strange
effects of the Greek fire, fell to the number of 30,000 men. In the second
siege, 716--718, they were again compelled to retreat. In 865 the [1.661] first
expedition of the Russians against Constantinople took place; followed by a
second in 904; a third in 941; and a fourth in 1043. In 1203 the Latins first
besieged and conquered, and in 1204 took by storm and pillaged the imperial
city: A.D. 1261 forms a new aera for Constantinople, in consequence of its
recovery by the Greeks. In 1422 Constantinople was besieged by Amurath II., but
the Byzantine empire was respited for a space of thirty years till it fell, in
1453, before the conquering sword of Mohammed II.
It would be interesting to trace the domestic character and training of the
citizens which hastened the ruin of the Eastern empire. The writers of Byzantine
history do not furnish many distinct statements, but hints and allusions are to
be found in the rebukes of the pulpit orator, or from the petty prohibitions of
the imperial code. On this subject much valuable information maybe obtained in
Montfaucon (M�m. de l'Acad. des Inscrip. vol. xiii. p. 474; Miller, De Genio,
Moribus, et Luxu Aevi Theodosiani; Milman, Hist. of Christianity; and the
Quarterly Review, vol. lxxviii. p. 346). While the life of the upper classes was
characterised by the pomp and prodigality of civilisation without any of its
ennobling or humanizing influences, the lower ranks were inordinately devoted to
amusement. The athletic games of ancient Greece had given way to the vulgar
exhibitions of juggling, rope-dancing, and tumbling. The drama was supplanted by
mimes and pantomimes; and though no gladiator was butchered to make a holiday
for the populace of Constantinople, it would seem that the interest which was
concentred upon the chariot races and the Circus was a compensation for the
excitement of those games which were forbidden by the new religion. The passion
and animosity which sprung from the struggle of the Blue and Green factions was
as furious and as bitter as any that has arisen among contending parties, where
the most sacred rights of liberty or faith were at stake.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. ARCHITECTURE AND BUILDINGS.
In the new capital of Constantine, emancipated from the restraint of Pagan
associations and art, the Byzantine builders founded an architecture peculiarly
their own. Of this the cupola was the great characteristic, to which every other
feature was subordinate. In consequence of this principle, that which at Athens
was straight, angular, and square, became in Constantinople curved and rounded,
concave within, and convex without. Thus the old architecture of Greece owed its
destruction to the same nation from which it had taken its first birth. (Comp.
Hope, Architecture, p. 121; Freeman, Hist. of Architecture, p. 164; Couchaud,
Choix d'Eglises Bysantines en Gr�ce.)
In describing the buildings of the city, it is more convenient to follow the
historical succession than to take the topographical arrangement. For, it must
be recollected, how little now remains. Where they first arose there they also
fell. Constantinople, ravaged by earthquakes, fires, the internal strife, and
the foreign foe, when the last of the Constantines lost his empire and life,
possessed perhaps not one edifice which the first Constantine or even Justinian
had seen; especially, too, as the fury of the Latin crusaders destroyed every
work of art that had escaped former disasters. A plan of the city, as it existed
in the reign of Arcadius, divided into its 14 regions, is given on the next
page, by which the position of the different buildings may be clearly seen.
At the siege of Byzantium, Constantine had pitched his tent upon the second
hill; to commemorate his success, he chose this site for the principal forum (Zosim.
2.31, 35), which appears to have been of an elliptical form. The two opposite
entrances formed triumphal arches; the porticoes, which enclosed it on every
side, were filled with statues of the tutelar deities of Greece.
At each end were two shrines, one of which held the statue of Cybele, which was
said to have been placed by the Argonauts upon Mt. Dindymus, but deprived of her
lions and of her hands from the attitude of command distorted into that of a
suppliant for the city; in the other was the Fortune of Byzantium (Euseb. Vit.
Const. 3.54; Sozomen. H. E. 2.5). The centre of the forum was occupied by a
lofty pillar, which, formed of marble and porphyry, rose to the height of 120
feet. On this column Constantine, with singular shamelessness, placed his own
statue with the attributes of Christ and Apollo, and substituted the nails of
the Passion for the rays of the Sun; Constantine was replaced by Julian, Julian
by Theodosius. In A.D. 1412 the keystone was loosened by an earthquake. The
statue fell under Alexius Comnenus, and was replaced by the Cross. The Palladium
was said to be buried under the pillar. (Von Hammer, Constantinopel und die
Bosporus, vol. i. p. 162.) Besides the principal forum was a second one, which
has been sometimes confounded with the other; it was square, with porticoes
surrounding it, consisting of two ranks of columns; in this the Augusteum, or
court of the palace, stood the Golden Miliarium, which, though it served the
same purpose as its namesake at Rome, did not resemble it in appearance, as this
was an elevated arcade, embellished with statues.
The Circus or Hippodrome was a stately building. The space between the two metae
or goals was filled with statues and obelisks. The Turks retain the translated
name of the horse-course (Atmeidan), but the ancient splendour of the place has
disappeared; it is no longer a circus, but an oblong open space, about 300 paces
long by 150 wide. (Hobhouse, Albania, vol. ii. p. 950.) At the upper end is a
granite obelisk of rather mean proportions, and covered with hieroglyphics of
poor workmanship. It is called after Theodosius, but was probably moved by that
emperor, after it had been erected by Constantine, to some other part of the
city. An epigram on the pedestal records the success of Proclus, praefect of the
city, under Theodosius the Great, in setting the obelisk upright. (Anthol. Graec.
4.17.) Near this stands the wreathed column of bronze, which, according to
legend, bore the golden tripod of Delphi, and was shattered by the iron mace of
Mohammed II. Clarke (Trav. vol. ii. p. 58) treated the latter circumstance as a
fiction of Th�venot; be the former true or not, the relic is now a poor
mutilated thing, with one end in the ground, above which it does not rise more
than 7 feet, and the end open and filled with rubbish. Fourteen churches,
fourteen palaces, several triumphal arches, and eight public baths are assigned
to the founder of the city. Constantine, and in this his example was followed by
his successors, imitated Ancient Rome in the construction of sewers. Two large
subterranean cisterns or reservoirs of water, constructed by the Greek emperors
in case of a siege, still remain; one called by the Turks the [1.662]
palace of the �Thousand and One Pillars,� is now perfectly dry.
PLAN OF CONSTANTINOPLE (AA, Chrysoceras, Golden Horn.)
I. REGION.
�House of Placidia Augusta.
�House of Marina.
�Baths of Arcadius.
�29 streets, 118 houses, 2 porticoes of great length.
II. REGION.
�Church of S. Sophia.
�The old Church.
�Senate House.
�Tribunal with porphyry steps.
�Baths of Zeuxippus.
�A Theatre.
�An Amphitheatre.
�34 streets, 98 large houses, 4 great porticoes.
III. REGION.
�The Circus Maximus.
�House of Pulcheria Augusta.
�The New Port.
�The Sigma Portico.
�Tribunal of the Forum of Constantine.
�94 great houses, 5 large porticoes.
IV. REGION.
�Miliarium Aureum.
�Augusteum.
�Basilica.
�Nymphaeum.
�Portico of Phanio.
�Marble Galley.
�Church of S. Menna.
�A Stadium.
�Stairs of Timasius.
�32 streets, 375 great houses, 4 large porticoes.
V. REGION.
�Baths of Honorius.
�Cistern of Theodosius.
�Theban Obelisk.
�Storehouses.
�Nymphaeum.
�Granaries of Troas.
�Prytaneum.
�Baths of Eudocia.
�The Strategium.
�The Forum of Theodosius.
�Granaries of Valens and Constantius.
�The Bosporian Ports.
�23 streets, 184 great houses, 7 large porticoes.
VI. REGION.
�Porphyry pillar of Constantine.
�Senate House.
�Neorian Port.
�Stairs of Sycoena.
�22 streets, 484 great houses, 1 large portico.
VII. REGION.
�S. Irene.
�S. Anastasia.
�S. Paul.
�Pillar of Theodosius.
�Two large Equestrian Statues.
�Part of the Forum of Theodosius.
�Baths of Corosia.
�85 streets, 711 great houses, 6 large porticoes.
VIII. REGION.
�Forum of Constantine.
�Portico on left side of Forum.
�Basilica of Theodosius.
�The Capital.
�22 streets, 108 great houses, 5 large porticoes.
IX. REGION.
�Church of Caenopolis.
�Church of Omonaea.
�Granaries of Alexandria.
�Granaries of Theodosius.
�Baths of Anastasia.
�16 streets, 116 great houses, 2 large porticoes.
X. REGION.
�Church of S. Achatius.
�Baths of Constantine.
�House of Augusta Placidia.
�House of Augusta Eudocia.
�House of Arcadia.
�Large Nymphaeum.
�20 streets, 636 great houses, 6 large porticoes.
XI. REGION.
�Church of the Apostles.
�Palace of Flacilla.
�House of Augusta Pulcheria.
�The Brazen Bull.
�Cistern of Arcadius.
�Cistern of Modestus.
�8 streets, 503 great houses, 4 large porticoes.
XII. REGION.
�Porta Aurea.
�Portico of Troas.
�Forum of Theodosius.
�Column with winding stairs.
�Mint or Treasury.
�Port of Theodosius.
�11 streets, 363 great houses, 3 large porticoes.
XIII. REGION.
�Church.
�Baths and Forum of Honorius.
�Theatre.
�Dock for ship-building.
�431 great houses, 1 large portico.
XIV. REGION.
�Church.
�Palace.
�Nymphaeum.
�Baths.
�Theatre.
�Lusorium.
�Wooden Bridge.
�11 streets, 167 great houses, 2 large porticoes.
The other still existing as a cistern, and called the �Subterranean Palace,� may
be described as an underground lake, with an arched roof to cover it, supported
on 336 marble pillars.
From the throne, seated upon which the emperor viewed the games of the Circus, a
winding staircase called cochlea descended to the palace. This was a magnificent
building, covering a great extent of ground, on the banks of the Propontis,
between the Hippodrome and the church of S. Sophia, now the Seraglio. The baths
of Zeuxippus, the site of which it is difficult to fix, as, while history seems
to connect them with S. Sophia and the palace, the original plan places them on
the other side of the city, near the harbour, were so embellished by Constantine
with statues of marble and bronze, that they became came famed as the most
beautiful in the world. These statues were brought from their local sanctuaries
to adorn the squares and baths of Constantinople,--the Athene of Lyndus, the
Muses of Helicon, the Amphitrite of Rhodes, the Pan which was consecrated by the
Greeks after the defeat of Xerxes. Theodosius the younger pulled down the
Dioscuri, who overlooked the Hippodrome. It was reserved [1.663] for the Latin
crusaders to destroy these precious remains of ancient art, and the four bronze
horses of San Marco at Venice are the only remains of the handywork of the
Grecian artists with which Constantinople was peopled.
While private houses and public buildings for business, for convenience, for
amusement, and splendour rose with the rapidity of enchantment, one class of
edifices was wanting. A few temples, such as those of the Sun, the Moon, and
Aphrodite, were permitted to stand in the Heropolis, though deprived of their
revenues. (Malala, Constant. x.) But few churches were built; of these one was
dedicated to the Supreme Wisdom. The ancient Temple of Peace, which afterwards
formed part of Santa Sophia, was appropriately transformed into a church. The
Church of the Twelve Apostles appears from Eusebius (Vit. Const. 4.58) to have
been finished a few days before the death of Constantine; it fell to ruin 20
years afterwards, was repaired by Constantius, rebuilt by Justinian, and
demolished by Mohammed II.
Theodosius the Great built the principal gate of Constantinople, �The Golden
Gate,� so celebrated by the Byzantine writers; this gate, on the S. of the town,
was that by which the emperors made their solemn entry, and stood at the
beginning of the principal street, which crossed the town up to the Bosporus.
Gyllius (Bandur. Imp. Orient. vol. ii. p. 595), in the 16th century, saw the
remains of it. It is now sought for in vain, though a gate entirely blocked up
is sometimes shown to travellers for it. The Empress Eudoxia, wife of Arcadius,
ornamented her city with a palace and baths. Theodosius II. loved the arts, and
himself cultivated painting and sculpture; he encouraged architecture, and
executed considerable works; in his reign the walls of Constantinople were in
great measure rebuilt, and the city adorned with thermae, a forum, and two
palaces for the sisters of Pulcheria. In 447, after the great earthquake, the
edifices of Constantinople were restored with renewed splendour. Marcian turned
his attention chiefly to the aqueducts; Leo I. Thrax to the churches of
Constantinople. Nothing is recorded as having been constructed under Zeno and
Anastasius. Justin I., besides his great works at Antioch, contributed to the
embellishments, or rather restoration of Constantinople. The reign of Justinian
is the most brilliant epoch of the Neo-Greek or Byzantine architecture; and,
like Hadrian, this emperor was entitled to the proud distinction of being called
by his contemporaries �reparator orbis.� The great ornament of Constantinople
was the temple reared by Justinian in honour of the Eternal Wisdom (S. Sophia).
This, the principal church of Constantinople, had been twice destroyed by fire,
after the exile of John Chrysostom, and during the Nika of the Blue and Green
factions. Anthemius of Tralles, and Isidorus of Miletus, were the builders
employed by Justinian to rebuild the church on a plan in which, as Mr. Hope
(Hist. of Architecture, p. 126) remarks, the wisdom of man shows but little.
Disregarding the cardinal rule that all architectural trick is inconsistent with
good taste, they endeavoured to make it appear entirely hovering in air without
the least earthly resting-place. The attempt was unsuccessful, for, in A.D. 558,
twenty-one years after the dedication, an earthquake nearly destroyed it;
another Isidorus, nephew of theformer, was employed to restore it; an elevation
of 20 feet more than it had before its fall was given to the dome, and the
originally circular was changed to an elliptical form. Though such was the
lightness of the dome that it appeared suspended �by a chain from Heaven,� the
circle which encompasses the dome rested on four strong arches, supported on
four massive piles, assisted on the N. and S. side by four columns of granite,
each of a shaft 40 feet long. Two larger and six smaller semi-domes sprouted out
and encircled the central cupola. The ground-plan describes the figure of a
Greek cross within a quadrangle, but on the inside was oval. (Comp. Procop. de
Aed. 1.1; Agath. v. pp. 152, 153; Paul. Silentiar. ad calc. Ann. Comnen. Alex.;
Evag. 4.31; Dallaway, Ancient and Modern Constantinople, p. 52.) The best
description of this magnificent church is to be seen in Batissier (Histoire de
l'Art Monumental, p. 386, foll.). Besides this great model of Eastern
architecture, Justinian erected more than twenty-five churches in Constantinople
and its suburbs. In honour of himself a colossal statue, representing the
emperor mounted on horseback and in an attitude of defiance, was placed upon a
column in the Augusteum before S. Sophia. This statue existed as late as the
16th century, when it was melted into cannon by the Turks. (Gyllius, de Top.
Const. 2.13.) The palace was also restored by Justinian, and magnificently
adorned with bronze, many coloured marbles and mosaics, representing the glories
of the African and Italian triumphs. From the time of Heraclius to the hour of
her fall, the outward glories of Constantinople shared the same fate as her
renown and greatness. Here and there some emperor might endeavour to repair the
ravages which time, nature, or violence had wrought upon the mighty works of his
predecessors. In the 10th century the palace, the ceremonies of which have been
described by Constantine Porphyrogenitus (de Caer. Aul. Byz.), was pre-eminent
for its size, strength, and magnificence. (Ducange, Constantinop. Christian.
2.4.) A large and irregular building, each separate part bore the character of
its founder, and the times.
The Latin crusaders, Mohammed II., and subsequent neglect and recklessness, have
effected such results, that it may be said, with almost literal truth of the
city of Constantine and Justinian, not one stone resteth upon another.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION.
With the foundation of a new capital a new order of things in the civil and
military administration was introduced; commenced by Diocletian it was perfected
by Constantine.
In the hierarchy of the state the magistrates were divided into 3 classes,
�I. The �Illustrious.�
�II. The �Spectabiles.�
�III. The �Clarissimi.�
There were 2 inferior ranks conferred on those who were not raised to the
senatorial dignity.
�IV. The �Perfectissimi.�
�V. The �Egregii.�
The 3rd epithet belonged to the senatorial rank, the 2nd to those of superior
distinction; the 1st was granted only to
�I. Consuls and patricians.
�II. The Praetorian praefects, with the praefects of Rome and Constantinople.
�III. The masters-general of the infantry and cavalry.
�IV. The seven ministers of the palace who exercised [1.664] �sacred� functions
about the person of the emperor.
�1. The consuls who, though their office had degenerated into an empty name,
were still the highest officers of the state, were inaugurated at the imperial
residence with the utmost splendour. The title of patricians became, under
Constantine, a personal and not an hereditary distinction, bestowed on the
ministers and favourites of the court.
�2. The praetorian praefects were the civil magistrates of the provinces, as the
immed�ate representatives of the imperial majesty: everything was under their
control. The accompanying table taken from Marquardt (Handbuch der R�m.
Alterthum, p. 240), gives the division of the empire under these four great
officers. Rome and Constantinople were alone exempted from their jurisdiction,
but were respectively under a praefect of the city, and a perfect equality was
established between the two municipal and the four praetorian praefects. The �spectabiles,�
in which were included the 3 proconsuls of Asia, Achaia, and Africa, with the
lieutenant-generals and military counts and dukes, formed an intermediate class
between the �illustrious� praefects and �honourable� magistrates of the
provinces.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIVISION OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE, A.D. 400.
I. PRAEFECTUS PRAETORIO GALLIARUM. A. Vicarius Hispaniae.
1. Consularis Baeticae.
2. Consularis Lusitaniae.
3. Consularis Gallaeciae.
4. Praeses Tarraconensis.
5. Praeses Carthaginiensis.
6. Praeses Tingitaniae.
7. Praeses Insularum Balearium.
B. Vicarius Septem Prouinciarum,
1. Consularis Viennensis.
2. Consularis Lugdunensis.
3. Consularis Germaniae I.
4. Consularis Germaniae II.
5. Consularis Belgicae I.
6. Consularis Belgicae II.
7. Praeses Alpium Maritimarum
8. Praeses Poeninarum et Graiarum
9. Praeses Maximae Sequanorum.
10. Praeses Aquitanicae I.
11. Praeses Aquitanicae II.
12. Praeses Novempopulanae.
13 Praeses Narbonensis I.
14. Praeses Narbonensis II.
15. Praeses Lugdunensis II.
16. Praeses Lugdunensis III.
17. Praeses Lugdunensis Senoniae.
C. Vicarious Britanniarum.
1. Consularis Maximae Caesariensis.
2. Consularis Valentiae.
3. Praeses Britanniae I.
4. Praeses Britanniae II.
5 Praeses Flaviae Caesariensis.
II PRAEFECTUS PRAETORIO ITALIAE. A. Vicarius Urbis Romae
1. Consularis Campaniae.
2. Consularis Tusciae et Umbriae.
3. Consularis Piceni Suburbicaril.
4. Consularis Siciliae.
5 Corrector Apuliae et Calabriae.
6. Corrector Bruttiorum et Lucaniae.
7. Praeses Samnii.
8. Praeses Sardiniae.
9. Praeses Corsicae.
10. Praeses Valeriae.
B. Vicarius Italiae.
1. Consularis Venetiae et Histriae.
2. Consularis Aemiliae.
3. Consularis Liguriae.
4. Consularis Flaminiae et Piceni Annonarii.
5. Praeses Alpium Cottiarum.
6. Praeses Rhaetiae I.
7. Praeses Rhaetiae II.
Illyrium Occidentale. 8. Consularis Pannonmae II.
9. Corrector Saviae.
10. Praeses Pannoniae I.
11. Praeses Dalmatiae.
12. Praeses Noricum Mediterraneum.
13. Praeses Noricum Ripense.
14. Dux Valeriae Ripensis.
C. Vicarius Africae.
1. Consularis Byzacii.
2. Consularis Numidiae.
3. Praeses Tripolitanae.
4. Praeses Mauritaniae Sifetensis.
5. Praeses Mauritaniae Caesariensis.
The Proconsul of Africa was directly under the Emperor, and not under the
Praefectus Praet. Ital,
III. PRAEFECTUS PRAFTORIO ILLYRIC:
A. Directly under the Praefect
The Diocese of Dacia.
1. Consularis Daciae Mediterraneae.
2. Praeses Moesiae I.
3. Praeses Praevalitanae.
4. Praeses Dardaniae.
4. Dux Daciae Ripensis.
B. Under a Proconsul
Achaia.
C. Under the Vicarius Macedoniae.
1. Consularis Macedoniae.
2. Consularis Cretae.
3. Praeses Thessaliae.
4. Praeses Epiri Veteris.
5, Praeses Epiri Novae.
6. Praeses Macedoniae Salutaris.
A part of this last belonged to the Diocoesis Dacia.
IV. PRAEFECTUS PEAETORIO ORIENTIS. A. Comes Orientis.
1. Consularis Palaestinae I
2. Consularis Phoenices.
3. Consularis Syriae I.
4. Consularis Ciliciae.
5. Consularis Cypri.
6. Praeses Palaestinae II.
7. Praeses Palaestinae Salutaris.
8. Praeses Phoenices Libani.
9. Praeses Euphratensis.
10. Praeses Syriae Salutaris.
11. Praeses Osrho�nae.
12. Praeses Mesopotamiae.
13. Praeses Ciliciae II.
14. Comes Rei Militaris Isauriae.
15. Dux Arab�ae.
B. Praefectus Augustalias.
1. Praeses Lybiae Sup.
2. Praeses Lybiae Inf.
3. Praeses Thebaidos.
4. Praeses Aegypti.
5. Praeses Arcadiae.
6. Corrector Augustamnicae.
C. Vicarious diocoeseos Asianae.
1. Consularis Pamphyliae.
2. Consularis Lydiae.
3. Consularis Cariae.
4. Consularis Lyciae.
5. Consularis Lycaoniae.
6. Consularis Pisidiae.
7. Consularis Phrygiae Pacatianae.
8. Consularis Phrygiae Salutaris.
D. Vicarius Ponticae.
1. Consularis Bithyniae.
2. Consularis Galatiae.
3. Corrector Paphlagoniae.
4. Praeses Honoriados.
(Praefectus Praetorio Orientis.)
5. Praeses Galatiae Salutaris.
6. Praeses Cappadociae I.
7. Praeses Cappadociae II.
8. Praeses Helenoponti.
9. Praeses Ponti Polemoniaci.
10. Praeses Armeniae I.
11. Praeses Armeniae II.
E. Vicarius Thraciarum.
1. Consularis Europae.
2. Consularis Thraciae
3. Praeses Haemimonti.
4. Praeses Rhodopae.
5. Praeses Moesiae II.
6. Praeses Scythiae.
Directly under the Emperor, the Proconsul of Asia under him,
1. Consularis Hellesponti.
2. Praeses Insularum.
The great framework of the Roman empire was broken up into 116 provinces, each
of which supported an expensive establishment. Of these 3 were governed by �Proconsules;�
37 by �Consulares;� 5 by �Correctores;� 71 by �Praesides.�
All these were entrusted with the administration of justice and the finances in
their respective districts. They were drawn from the profession of the law.
The defence of the Roman empire on the important [1.665] frontiers of the Rhine,
the Upper and Lower Danube and the Euphrates, was committed to 8 masters-general
of cavalry and infantry: under them were stationed 35 military commanders in the
provinces; 3 in Britain; 6 in Gaul; 1 in Spain; 1 in Italy; 5 on the Upper
Danube; 4 on the Lower Danube; 8 in Asia; 3 in Aegypt; 4 in Africa. These were
distinguished by the titles of �dux� or duke, and �comes,� counts or companions.
There were 583 stations or garrisons established on the frontiers, and the
effective force of the troops, under the successors of Constantine was computed
at 645,000 soldiers. From the difficulty of the levies, they were compelled to
have recourse to barbarian auxiliaries.
Besides these magistrates and generals 7 great officers of state remained at
court.
�1. The eunuch, �praepositus,� or praefect of the bed-chamber, under whom were
�comites� to regulate the wardrobe and table of the emperor.
�2. The �masters of the offices,� the supreme magistrate of the palace, who
inspected the discipline of the civil and military schools. In his office the
public correspondence was managed in the 4 scrinia or bureaux.
�3. The �quaestor,� who may be compared with a modem chancellor.
�4. The �count of the sacred largesses,� or treasurer general of the revenue.
�5. The �count of the private estate,� or privy purse.
�6, 7. The �counts of the domestics,� or officers in command of the horse and
foot guards, consisting of 7 battalions of 500 men each.
To facilitate intercourse between the court and the provinces �posts� were
established: by an intolerable abuse the agents employed for this purpose became
the official spies; and as in the new jurisdiction of the empire the �quaestio�
or torture was permitted in any offence where �hostile intention� against prince
or state was presumed, the terrors of malicious informations were materially
increased.
The treasury was supplied by a system of direct taxation, and the word indiction
was transferred from the solemn edict of the emperor to the measure of tribute
which it prescribed, and the term allowed for payment. The �decurions,� who
formed the corporations of the cities, were charged with assessing according to
the census of property prepared by the �tabularii� the payment due from each
proprietor. Besides the land-tax, which was in its operation a proprietor or
landlord's tax, there was a capitation tax on all who were not possessed of
landed property. Certain classes were gradually exempted, till at length it fell
solely on the �coloni� and agricultural slaves. (Comp. Savigny, Abhand. der
Berlin. Acad. 1822-23. p. 27.) Besides these general taxes upon industry
�benevolences,� under the name of �coronary gold,� were also exacted from
communities on certain occasions.
It must be admitted that the Byzantine fiscal system, though so rapacious that
it extracted for the government the whole annual surplus of the people's
industry, was constructed with great financial skill. One fact may be cited to
show how wisely this branch of the public service was administered. From the
fall of the Western Roman Empire to the conquest of Constantinople by the
Crusaders the gold coinage of the Empire was maintained constantly of the same
weight and standard. The concave gold byzants of Isaac II. are precisely of the
same weight and value as the solidus of Leo the Great and Zeno the Isaurian.
Gold was the circulating medium of the Empire, and the purity of the Byzantine
coinage rendered it for many centuries the only gold currency that circulated in
Europe.
An admirable account of the internal administration of the empire, and the
social condition of the people will be found in Mr. Finlay's learned volumes,
Greece under the Romans, and Mediaeval Greece. See also Hullmann, Geschichte der
Byzantischen Handels.
For the topography of Constantinople the following works can be consulted:--Von
Hammer, Constantinopel und die Bosporus; Dallaway, Constantinople, Ancient and
Modern; Andreossy, Constantinople et le Bosphore; Carbognano, Descr. Topograph.
di Const.; Banduri, Imp. Orient.; Codinus, de Orig. Constant.; Ducange,
Constant. Christ. - Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography,
William Smith, LLD, Ed.
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Table of Contents
Main Menu
- Ancient Assyrian Social Structure
- Ancient Babylonia
- Ancient Canaan During the Time of Joshua
- Ancient History Timeline
- Ancient Oil Lamps
- Antonia Fortress
- Archaeology of Ancient Assyria
- Assyria and Bible Prophecy
- Augustus Caesar
- Background Bible Study
- Bible
- Biblical Geography
- Fallen Empires - Archaeological Discoveries and the Bible
- First Century Jerusalem
- Glossary of Latin Words
- Herod Agrippa I
- Herod Antipas
- Herod the Great
- Herod's Temple
- High Priest's in New Testament Times
- Jewish Literature in New Testament Times
- Library collection
- Map of David's Kingdom
- Map of the Divided Kingdom - Israel and Judah
- Map of the Ministry of Jesus
- Matthew Henry Bible Commentary
- Messianic Prophecy
- Nero Caesar Emperor
- Online Bible Maps
- Paul's First Missionary Journey
- Paul's Second Missionary Journey
- Paul's Third Missionary Journey
- Pontius Pilate
- Questions About the Ancient World
- Tabernacle of Ancient Israel
- Tax Collectors in New Testament Times
- The Babylonian Captivity
- The Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser
- The Books of the New Testament
- The Court of the Gentiles
- The Court of the Women in the Temple
- The Destruction of Israel
- The Fall of Judah with Map
- The History Of Rome
- The Incredible Bible
- The Jewish Calendar in Ancient Hebrew History
- The Life of Jesus in Chronological Order
- The Life of Jesus in Harmony
- The Names of God
- The New Testament
- The Old Testament
- The Passion of the Christ
- The Pharisees
- The Sacred Year of Israel in New Testament Times
- The Samaritans
- The Scribes
Ancient Questions
- Why Do the Huldah Gates Appear Different in Ancient Replicas and Modern Photos?
- What Is the Origin of the Japanese and Chinese Peoples? A Biblical Perspective
- How did the ancient Greeks and Romans practice medicine and treat illnesses?
- What were the major contributions of ancient Babylon to mathematics and astronomy?
- How did the ancient Persians create and administer their vast empire?
- What were the cultural and artistic achievements of ancient India, particularly during the Gupta Empire?
- How did ancient civilizations like the Incas and Aztecs build their remarkable cities and structures?
- What were the major trade routes and trading practices of the ancient world?
- What was the role of slavery in ancient societies like Rome and Greece?
- How did the ancient Mayans develop their sophisticated calendar system?
Bible Study Questions
- Why Do Christians Celebrate Christmas?
- How Many Chapters Are There in the Bible?
- The Five Key Visions in the New Testament
- The 400-Year Prophecy: Unpacking Genesis 15 and the Journey of a People
- The Authorized (King James) Version (AKJV): Historical Significance, Translation Methodology, and Lasting Impact
- Exploring the English Standard Version (ESV): Its Aspects, Comparisons, Impact on Biblical Studies, and Church Use
- A Detailed Historical Analysis of Language Updates in the KJ21: Comparison with Other Versions
- A Detailed Historical Analysis of the American Standard Version (ASV): Comparison to the King James Version, Influence on Later Translations, and Evaluation of Strengths and Weaknesses
- A Detailed Historical Analysis of Amplifications in the Amplified Bible (AMP) and Its Comparison to Other Bible Translations
- Detailed Historical Analysis of the Amplified Bible Classic Edition (AMPC): Examples of Amplifications and Comparative Analysis with Other Bible Translations
About
Welcome to Free Bible: Unearthing the Past, Illuminating the Present! Step into a world where ancient history and biblical narratives intertwine, inviting you to explore the rich tapestry of human civilization.
Discover the captivating stories of forgotten empires, delve into the customs and cultures of our ancestors, and witness the remarkable findings unearthed by dedicated archaeologists.
Immerse yourself in a treasure trove of knowledge, where the past comes alive and illuminates our understanding of the present.
Join us on this extraordinary journey through time, where curiosity is rewarded and ancient mysteries await your exploration.
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