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History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire Volume
5
by Edward Gibbon, Esq. With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
April, 1997 [Etext # 894]
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This is volume five of the six volumes of Edward Gibbon's
History Of The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire. If you find
any errors please feel free to notify me of them. I want to make
this the best etext edition possible for both scholars and the
general public. Haradda@aol.com and davidr@inconnect.com are my
email addresses for now. Please feel free to send me your
comments and I hope you enjoy this.
David Reed
History Of The Decline And Fall Of The
Roman Empire
Edward Gibbon, Esq.
With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
Vol. 5
1782 (Written), 1845 (Revised)
Chapter XLIX: Conquest Of Italy By The
Franks.
Part I.
Introduction, Worship, And Persecution Of Images. -- Revolt Of
Italy And Rome. -- Temporal Dominion Of The Popes. -- Conquest Of
Italy By The Franks. -- Establishment Of Images. -- Character And
Coronation Of Charlemagne. -- Restoration And Decay Of The Roman
Empire In The West. -- Independence Of Italy. -- Constitution Of
The Germanic Body.
In the connection of the church and state, I have considered
the former as subservient only, and relative, to the latter; a
salutary maxim, if in fact, as well as in narrative, it had ever
been held sacred. The Oriental philosophy of the Gnostics, the
dark abyss of predestination and grace, and the strange
transformation of the Eucharist from the sign to the substance of
Christ's body, I have purposely abandoned to the curiosity of
speculative divines. But I have reviewed, with diligence and
pleasure, the objects of ecclesiastical history, by which the
decline and fall of the Roman empire were materially affected,
the propagation of Christianity, the constitution of the Catholic
church, the ruin of Paganism, and the sects that arose from the
mysterious controversies concerning the Trinity and incarnation.
At the head of this class, we may justly rank the worship of
images, so fiercely disputed in the eighth and ninth centuries;
since a question of popular superstition produced the revolt of
Italy, the temporal power of the popes, and the restoration of
the Roman empire in the West.
The primitive Christians were possessed with an unconquerable
repugnance to the use and abuse of images; and this aversion may
be ascribed to their descent from the Jews, and their enmity to
the Greeks. The Mosaic law had severely proscribed all
representations of the Deity; and that precept was firmly
established in the principles and practice of the chosen people.
The wit of the Christian apologists was pointed against the
foolish idolaters, who bowed before the workmanship of their own
hands; the images of brass and marble, which, had
they been endowed with sense and
motion, should have started rather from the pedestal to adore the
creative powers of the artist. Perhaps some recent and imperfect
converts of the Gnostic tribe might crown the statues of Christ
and St. Paul with the profane honors which they paid to those of
Aristotle and Pythagoras; but the public religion of the
Catholics was uniformly simple and spiritual; and the first
notice of the use of pictures is in the censure of the council of
Illiberis, three hundred years after the Christian æra.
Under the successors of Constantine, in the peace and luxury of
the triumphant church, the more prudent bishops condescended to
indulge a visible superstition, for the benefit of the multitude;
and, after the ruin of Paganism, they were no longer restrained
by the apprehension of an odious parallel. The first introduction
of a symbolic worship was in the veneration of the cross, and of
relics. The saints and martyrs, whose intercession was implored,
were seated on the right hand if God; but the gracious and often
supernatural favors, which, in the popular belief, were showered
round their tomb, conveyed an unquestionable sanction of the
devout pilgrims, who visited, and touched, and kissed these
lifeless remains, the memorials of their merits and sufferings.
But a memorial, more interesting than the skull or the sandals of
a departed worthy, is the faithful copy of his person and
features, delineated by the arts of painting or sculpture. In
every age, such copies, so congenial to human feelings, have been
cherished by the zeal of private friendship, or public esteem:
the images of the Roman emperors were adored with civil, and
almost religious, honors; a reverence less ostentatious, but more
sincere, was applied to the statues of sages and patriots; and
these profane virtues, these splendid sins, disappeared in the
presence of the holy men, who had died for their celestial and
everlasting country. At first, the experiment was made with
caution and scruple; and the venerable pictures were discreetly
allowed to instruct the ignorant, to awaken the cold, and to
gratify the prejudices of the heathen proselytes. By a slow
though inevitable progression, the honors of the original were
transferred to the copy: the devout Christian prayed before the
image of a saint; and the Pagan rites of genuflection,
luminaries, and incense, again stole into the Catholic church.
The scruples of reason, or piety, were silenced by the strong
evidence of visions and miracles; and the pictures which speak,
and move, and bleed, must be endowed with a divine energy, and
may be considered as the proper objects of religious adoration.
The most audacious pencil might tremble in the rash attempt of
defining, by forms and colors, the infinite Spirit, the eternal
Father, who pervades and sustains the universe. But the
superstitious mind was more easily reconciled to paint and to
worship the angels, and, above all, the Son of God, under the
human shape, which, on earth, they have condescended to assume.
The second person of the Trinity had been clothed with a real and
mortal body; but that body had ascended into heaven: and, had not
some similitude been presented to the eyes of his disciples, the
spiritual worship of Christ might have been obliterated by the
visible relics and representations of the saints. A similar
indulgence was requisite and propitious for the Virgin Mary: the
place of her burial was unknown; and the assumption of her soul
and body into heaven was adopted by the credulity of the Greeks
and Latins. The use, and even the worship, of images was firmly
established before the end of the sixth century: they were fondly
cherished by the warm imagination of the Greeks and Asiatics: the
Pantheon and Vatican were adorned with the emblems of a new
superstition; but this semblance of idolatry was more coldly
entertained by the rude Barbarians and the Arian clergy of the
West. The bolder forms of sculpture, in brass or marble, which
peopled the temples of antiquity, were offensive to the fancy or
conscience of the Christian Greeks: and a smooth surface of
colors has ever been esteemed a more decent and harmless mode of
imitation.
The merit and effect of a copy depends on its resemblance with
the original; but the primitive Christians were ignorant of the
genuine features of the Son of God, his mother, and his apostles:
the statue of Christ at Paneas in Palestine was more probably
that of some temporal savior; the Gnostics and their profane
monuments were reprobated; and the fancy of the Christian artists
could only be guided by the clandestine imitation of some heathen
model. In this distress, a bold and dexterous invention assured
at once the likeness of the image and the innocence of the
worship. A new super structure of fable was raised on the popular
basis of a Syrian legend, on the correspondence of Christ and
Abgarus, so famous in the days of Eusebius, so reluctantly
deserted by our modern advocates. The bishop of Cæsarea
records the epistle, but he most strangely forgets the picture of
Christ; the perfect impression of his face on a linen, with which
he gratified the faith of the royal stranger who had invoked his
healing power, and offered the strong city of Edessa to protect
him against the malice of the Jews. The ignorance of the
primitive church is explained by the long imprisonment of the
image in a niche of the wall, from whence, after an oblivion of
five hundred years, it was released by some prudent bishop, and
seasonably presented to the devotion of the times. Its first and
most glorious exploit was the deliverance of the city from the
arms of Chosroes Nushirvan; and it was soon revered as a pledge
of the divine promise, that Edessa should never be taken by a
foreign enemy. It is true, indeed, that the text of Procopius
ascribes the double deliverance of Edessa to the wealth and valor
of her citizens, who purchased the absence and repelled the
assaults of the Persian monarch. He was ignorant, the profane
historian, of the testimony which he is compelled to deliver in
the ecclesiastical page of Evagrius, that the Palladium was
exposed on the rampart, and that the water which had been
sprinkled on the holy face, instead of quenching, added new fuel
to the flames of the besieged. After this important service, the
image of Edessa was preserved with respect and gratitude; and if
the Armenians rejected the legend, the more credulous Greeks
adored the similitude, which was not the work of any mortal
pencil, but the immediate creation of the divine original. The
style and sentiments of a Byzantine hymn will declare how far
their worship was removed from the grossest idolatry. "How can we
with mortal eyes contemplate this image, whose celestial splendor
the host of heaven presumes not to behold? He who dwells in
heaven, condescends this day to visit us by his venerable image;
He who is seated on the cherubim, visits us this day by a
picture, which the Father has delineated with his immaculate
hand, which he has formed in an ineffable manner, and which we
sanctify by adoring it with fear and love." Before the end of the
sixth century, these images, made without
hands, (in Greek it is a single word, ) were
propagated in the camps and cities of the Eastern empire: they
were the objects of worship, and the instruments of miracles; and
in the hour of danger or tumult, their venerable presence could
revive the hope, rekindle the courage, or repress the fury, of
the Roman legions. Of these pictures, the far greater part, the
transcripts of a human pencil, could only pretend to a secondary
likeness and improper title: but there were some of higher
descent, who derived their resemblance from an immediate contact
with the original, endowed, for that purpose, with a miraculous
and prolific virtue. The most ambitious aspired from a filial to
a fraternal relation with the image of Edessa; and such is the
veronica of Rome, or Spain, or
Jerusalem, which Christ in his agony and bloody sweat applied to
his face, and delivered to a holy matron. The fruitful precedent
was speedily transferred to the Virgin Mary, and the saints and
martyrs. In the church of Diospolis, in Palestine, the features
of the Mother of God were deeply inscribed in a marble column;
the East and West have been decorated by the pencil of St. Luke;
and the Evangelist, who was perhaps a physician, has been forced
to exercise the occupation of a painter, so profane and odious in
the eyes of the primitive Christians. The Olympian Jove, created
by the muse of Homer and the chisel of Phidias, might inspire a
philosophic mind with momentary devotion; but these Catholic
images were faintly and flatly delineated by monkish artists in
the last degeneracy of taste and genius.
The worship of images had stolen into the church by insensible
degrees, and each petty step was pleasing to the superstitious
mind, as productive of comfort, and innocent of sin. But in the
beginning of the eighth century, in the full magnitude of the
abuse, the more timorous Greeks were awakened by an apprehension,
that under the mask of Christianity, they had restored the
religion of their fathers: they heard, with grief and impatience,
the name of idolaters; the incessant charge of the Jews and
Mahometans, who derived from the Law and the Koran an immortal
hatred to graven images and all relative worship. The servitude
of the Jews might curb their zeal, and depreciate their
authority; but the triumphant Mussulmans, who reigned at
Damascus, and threatened Constantinople, cast into the scale of
reproach the accumulated weight of truth and victory. The cities
of Syria, Palestine, and Egypt had been fortified with the images
of Christ, his mother, and his saints; and each city presumed on
the hope or promise of miraculous defence. In a rapid conquest of
ten years, the Arabs subdued those cities and these images; and,
in their opinion, the Lord of Hosts pronounced a decisive
judgment between the adoration and contempt of these mute and
inanimate idols. * For a while Edessa had braved the Persian
assaults; but the chosen city, the spouse of Christ, was involved
in the common ruin; and his divine resemblance became the slave
and trophy of the infidels. After a servitude of three hundred
years, the Palladium was yielded to the devotion of
Constantinople, for a ransom of twelve thousand pounds of silver,
the redemption of two hundred Mussulmans, and a perpetual truce
for the territory of Edessa. In this season of distress and
dismay, the eloquence of the monks was exercised in the defence
of images; and they attempted to prove, that the sin and schism
of the greatest part of the Orientals had forfeited the favor,
and annihilated the virtue, of these precious symbols. But they
were now opposed by the murmurs of many simple or rational
Christians, who appealed to the evidence of texts, of facts, and
of the primitive times, and secretly desired the reformation of
the church. As the worship of images had never been established
by any general or positive law, its progress in the Eastern
empire had been retarded, or accelerated, by the differences of
men and manners, the local degrees of refinement, and the
personal characters of the bishops. The splendid devotion was
fondly cherished by the levity of the capital, and the inventive
genius of the Byzantine clergy; while the rude and remote
districts of Asia were strangers to this innovation of sacred
luxury. Many large congregations of Gnostics and Arians
maintained, after their conversion, the simple worship which had
preceded their separation; and the Armenians, the most warlike
subjects of Rome, were not reconciled, in the twelfth century, to
the sight of images. These various denominations of men afforded
a fund of prejudice and aversion, of small account in the
villages of Anatolia or Thrace, but which, in the fortune of a
soldier, a prelate, or a eunuch, might be often connected with
the powers of the church and state.
Of such adventurers, the most fortunate was the emperor Leo
the Third, who, from the mountains of Isauria, ascended the
throne of the East. He was ignorant of sacred and profane
letters; but his education, his reason, perhaps his intercourse
with the Jews and Arabs, had inspired the martial peasant with a
hatred of images; and it was held to be the duty of a prince to
impose on his subjects the dictates of his own conscience. But in
the outset of an unsettled reign, during ten years of toil and
danger, Leo submitted to the meanness of hypocrisy, bowed before
the idols which he despised, and satisfied the Roman pontiff with
the annual professions of his orthodoxy and zeal. In the
reformation of religion, his first steps were moderate and
cautious: he assembled a great council of senators and bishops,
and enacted, with their consent, that all the images should be
removed from the sanctuary and altar to a proper height in the
churches where they might be visible to the eyes, and
inaccessible to the superstition, of the people. But it was
impossible on either side to check the rapid through adverse
impulse of veneration and abhorrence: in their lofty position,
the sacred images still edified their votaries, and reproached
the tyrant. He was himself provoked by resistance and invective;
and his own party accused him of an imperfect discharge of his
duty, and urged for his imitation the example of the Jewish king,
who had broken without scruple the brazen serpent of the temple.
By a second edict, he proscribed the existence as well as the use
of religious pictures; the churches of Constantinople and the
provinces were cleansed from idolatry; the images of Christ, the
Virgin, and the saints, were demolished, or a smooth surface of
plaster was spread over the walls of the edifice. The sect of the
Iconoclasts was supported by the zeal and despotism of six
emperors, and the East and West were involved in a noisy conflict
of one hundred and twenty years. It was the design of Leo the
Isaurian to pronounce the condemnation of images as an article of
faith, and by the authority of a general council: but the
convocation of such an assembly was reserved for his son
Constantine; and though it is stigmatized by triumphant bigotry
as a meeting of fools and atheists, their own partial and
mutilated acts betray many symptoms of reason and piety. The
debates and decrees of many provincial synods introduced the
summons of the general council which met in the suburbs of
Constantinople, and was composed of the respectable number of
three hundred and thirty-eight bishops of Europe and Anatolia;
for the patriarchs of Antioch and Alexandria were the slaves of
the caliph, and the Roman pontiff had withdrawn the churches of
Italy and the West from the communion of the Greeks. This
Byzantine synod assumed the rank and powers of the seventh
general council; yet even this title was a recognition of the six
preceding assemblies, which had laboriously built the structure
of the Catholic faith. After a serious deliberation of six
months, the three hundred and thirty-eight bishops pronounced and
subscribed a unanimous decree, that all visible symbols of
Christ, except in the Eucharist, were either blasphemous or
heretical; that image-worship was a corruption of Christianity
and a renewal of Paganism; that all such monuments of idolatry
should be broken or erased; and that those who should refuse to
deliver the objects of their private superstition, were guilty of
disobedience to the authority of the church and of the emperor.
In their loud and loyal acclamations, they celebrated the merits
of their temporal redeemer; and to his zeal and justice they
intrusted the execution of their spiritual censures. At
Constantinople, as in the former councils, the will of the prince
was the rule of episcopal faith; but on this occasion, I am
inclined to suspect that a large majority of the prelates
sacrificed their secret conscience to the temptations of hope and
fear. In the long night of superstition, the Christians had
wandered far away from the simplicity of the gospel: nor was it
easy for them to discern the clew, and tread back the mazes, of
the labyrinth. The worship of images was inseparably blended, at
least to a pious fancy, with the Cross, the Virgin, the Saints
and their relics; the holy ground was involved in a cloud of
miracles and visions; and the nerves of the mind, curiosity and
scepticism, were benumbed by the habits of obedience and belief.
Constantine himself is accused of indulging a royal license to
doubt, or deny, or deride the mysteries of the Catholics, but
they were deeply inscribed in the public and private creed of his
bishops; and the boldest Iconoclast might assault with a secret
horror the monuments of popular devotion, which were consecrated
to the honor of his celestial patrons. In the reformation of the
sixteenth century, freedom and knowledge had expanded all the
faculties of man: the thirst of innovation superseded the
reverence of antiquity; and the vigor of Europe could disdain
those phantoms which terrified the sickly and servile weakness of
the Greeks.
The scandal of an abstract heresy can be only proclaimed to
the people by the blast of the ecclesiastical trumpet; but the
most ignorant can perceive, the most torpid must feel, the
profanation and downfall of their visible deities. The first
hostilities of Leo were directed against a lofty Christ on the
vestibule, and above the gate, of the palace. A ladder had been
planted for the assault, but it was furiously shaken by a crowd
of zealots and women: they beheld, with pious transport, the
ministers of sacrilege tumbling from on high and dashed against
the pavement: and the honors of the ancient martyrs were
prostituted to these criminals, who justly suffered for murder
and rebellion. The execution of the Imperial edicts was resisted
by frequent tumults in Constantinople and the provinces: the
person of Leo was endangered, his officers were massacred, and
the popular enthusiasm was quelled by the strongest efforts of
the civil and military power. Of the Archipelago, or Holy Sea,
the numerous islands were filled with images and monks: their
votaries abjured, without scruple, the enemy of Christ, his
mother, and the saints; they armed a fleet of boats and galleys,
displayed their consecrated banners, and boldly steered for the
harbor of Constantinople, to place on the throne a new favorite
of God and the people. They depended on the succor of a miracle:
but their miracles were inefficient against the Greek
fire; and, after the defeat and conflagration of
the fleet, the naked islands were abandoned to the clemency or
justice of the conqueror. The son of Leo, in the first year of
his reign, had undertaken an expedition against the Saracens:
during his absence, the capital, the palace, and the purple, were
occupied by his kinsman Artavasdes, the ambitious champion of the
orthodox faith. The worship of images was triumphantly restored:
the patriarch renounced his dissimulation, or dissembled his
sentiments and the righteous claims of the usurper was
acknowledged, both in the new, and in ancient, Rome. Constantine
flew for refuge to his paternal mountains; but he descended at
the head of the bold and affectionate Isaurians; and his final
victory confounded the arms and predictions of the fanatics. His
long reign was distracted with clamor, sedition, conspiracy, and
mutual hatred, and sanguinary revenge; the persecution of images
was the motive or pretence, of his adversaries; and, if they
missed a temporal diadem, they were rewarded by the Greeks with
the crown of martyrdom. In every act of open and clandestine
treason, the emperor felt the unforgiving enmity of the monks,
the faithful slaves of the superstition to which they owed their
riches and influence. They prayed, they preached, they absolved,
they inflamed, they conspired; the solitude of Palestine poured
forth a torrent of invective; and the pen of St. John Damascenus,
the last of the Greek fathers, devoted the tyrant's head, both in
this world and the next. * I am not at leisure to examine how far
the monks provoked, nor how much they have exaggerated, their
real and pretended sufferings, nor how many lost their lives or
limbs, their eyes or their beards, by the cruelty of the emperor.
From the chastisement of individuals, he proceeded to the
abolition of the order; and, as it was wealthy and useless, his
resentment might be stimulated by avarice, and justified by
patriotism. The formidable name and mission of the
Dragon, his visitor-general, excited
the terror and abhorrence of the black
nation: the religious communities were dissolved, the buildings
were converted into magazines, or bar racks; the lands, movables,
and cattle were confiscated; and our modern precedents will
support the charge, that much wanton or malicious havoc was
exercised against the relics, and even the books of the
monasteries. With the habit and profession of monks, the public
and private worship of images was rigorously proscribed; and it
should seem, that a solemn abjuration of idolatry was exacted
from the subjects, or at least from the clergy, of the Eastern
empire.
The patient East abjured, with reluctance, her sacred images;
they were fondly cherished, and vigorously defended, by the
independent zeal of the Italians. In ecclesiastical rank and
jurisdiction, the patriarch of Constantinople and the pope of
Rome were nearly equal. But the Greek prelate was a domestic
slave under the eye of his master, at whose nod he alternately
passed from the convent to the throne, and from the throne to the
convent. A distant and dangerous station, amidst the Barbarians
of the West, excited the spirit and freedom of the Latin bishops.
Their popular election endeared them to the Romans: the public
and private indigence was relieved by their ample revenue; and
the weakness or neglect of the emperors compelled them to
consult, both in peace and war, the temporal safety of the city.
In the school of adversity the priest insensibly imbibed the
virtues and the ambition of a prince; the same character was
assumed, the same policy was adopted, by the Italian, the Greek,
or the Syrian, who ascended the chair of St. Peter; and, after
the loss of her legions and provinces, the genius and fortune of
the popes again restored the supremacy of Rome. It is agreed,
that in the eighth century, their dominion was founded on
rebellion, and that the rebellion was produced, and justified, by
the heresy of the Iconoclasts; but the conduct of the second and
third Gregory, in this memorable contest, is variously
interpreted by the wishes of their friends and enemies. The
Byzantine writers unanimously declare, that, after a fruitless
admonition, they pronounced the separation of the East and West,
and deprived the sacrilegious tyrant of the revenue and
sovereignty of Italy. Their excommunication is still more clearly
expressed by the Greeks, who beheld the accomplishment of the
papal triumphs; and as they are more strongly attached to their
religion than to their country, they praise, instead of blaming,
the zeal and orthodoxy of these apostolical men. The modern
champions of Rome are eager to accept the praise and the
precedent: this great and glorious example of the deposition of
royal heretics is celebrated by the cardinals Baronius and
Bellarmine; and if they are asked, why the same thunders were not
hurled against the Neros and Julians of antiquity, they reply,
that the weakness of the primitive church was the sole cause of
her patient loyalty. On this occasion the effects of love and
hatred are the same; and the zealous Protestants, who seek to
kindle the indignation, and to alarm the fears, of princes and
magistrates, expatiate on the insolence and treason of the two
Gregories against their lawful sovereign. They are defended only
by the moderate Catholics, for the most part, of the Gallican
church, who respect the saint, without approving the sin. These
common advocates of the crown and the mitre circumscribe the
truth of facts by the rule of equity, Scripture, and tradition,
and appeal to the evidence of the Latins, and the lives and
epistles of the popes themselves.
Chapter XLIX: Conquest Of Italy By The Franks. --
Part II.
Two original epistles, from Gregory the Second to the emperor
Leo, are still extant; and if they cannot be praised as the most
perfect models of eloquence and logic, they exhibit the portrait,
or at least the mask, of the founder of the papal monarchy.
"During ten pure and fortunate years," says Gregory to the
emperor, "we have tasted the annual comfort of your royal
letters, subscribed in purple ink, with your own hand, the sacred
pledges of your attachment to the orthodox creed of our fathers.
How deplorable is the change! how tremendous the scandal! You now
accuse the Catholics of idolatry; and, by the accusation, you
betray your own impiety and ignorance. To this ignorance we are
compelled to adapt the grossness of our style and arguments: the
first elements of holy letters are sufficient for your confusion;
and were you to enter a grammar-school, and avow yourself the
enemy of our worship, the simple and pious children would be
provoked to cast their horn-books at your head." After this
decent salutation, the pope attempts the usual distinction
between the idols of antiquity and the Christian images. The
former were the fanciful representations of phantoms or
dæmons, at a time when the true God had not manifested his
person in any visible likeness. The latter are the genuine forms
of Christ, his mother, and his saints, who had approved, by a
crowd of miracles, the innocence and merit of this relative
worship. He must indeed have trusted to the ignorance of Leo,
since he could assert the perpetual use of images, from the
apostolic age, and their venerable presence in the six synods of
the Catholic church. A more specious argument is drawn from
present possession and recent practice the harmony of the
Christian world supersedes the demand of a general council; and
Gregory frankly confesses, than such assemblies can only be
useful under the reign of an orthodox prince. To the impudent and
inhuman Leo, more guilty than a heretic, he recommends peace,
silence, and implicit obedience to his spiritual guides of
Constantinople and Rome. The limits of civil and ecclesiastical
powers are defined by the pontiff. To the former he appropriates
the body; to the latter, the soul: the sword of justice is in the
hands of the magistrate: the more formidable weapon of
excommunication is intrusted to the clergy; and in the exercise
of their divine commission a zealous son will not spare his
offending father: the successor of St. Peter may lawfully
chastise the kings of the earth. "You assault us, O tyrant! with
a carnal and military hand: unarmed and naked we can only implore
the Christ, the prince of the heavenly host, that he will send
unto you a devil, for the destruction of your body and the
salvation of your soul. You declare, with foolish arrogance, I
will despatch my orders to Rome: I will break in pieces the image
of St. Peter; and Gregory, like his predecessor Martin, shall be
transported in chains, and in exile, to the foot of the Imperial
throne. Would to God that I might be permitted to tread in the
footsteps of the holy Martin! but may the fate of Constans serve
as a warning to the persecutors of the church! After his just
condemnation by the bishops of Sicily, the tyrant was cut off, in
the fullness of his sins, by a domestic servant: the saint is
still adored by the nations of Scythia, among whom he ended his
banishment and his life. But it is our duty to live for the
edification and support of the faithful people; nor are we
reduced to risk our safety on the event of a combat. Incapable as
you are of defending your Roman subjects, the maritime situation
of the city may perhaps expose it to your depredation but we can
remove to the distance of four-and-twenty
stadia, to the first fortress of the
Lombards, and then -- you may pursue the winds. Are you ignorant
that the popes are the bond of union, the mediators of peace,
between the East and West? The eyes of the nations are fixed on
our humility; and they revere, as a God upon earth, the apostle
St. Peter, whose image you threaten to destroy. The remote and
interior kingdoms of the West present their homage to Christ and
his vicegerent; and we now prepare to visit one of their most
powerful monarchs, who desires to receive from our hands the
sacrament of baptism. The Barbarians have submitted to the yoke
of the gospel, while you alone are deaf to the voice of the
shepherd. These pious Barbarians are kindled into rage: they
thirst to avenge the persecution of the East. Abandon your rash
and fatal enterprise; reflect, tremble, and repent. If you
persist, we are innocent of the blood that will be spilt in the
contest; may it fall on your own head!"
The first assault of Leo against the images of Constantinople
had been witnessed by a crowd of strangers from Italy and the
West, who related with grief and indignation the sacrilege of the
emperor. But on the reception of his proscriptive edict, they
trembled for their domestic deities: the images of Christ and the
Virgin, of the angels, martyrs, and saints, were abolished in all
the churches of Italy; and a strong alternative was proposed to
the Roman pontiff, the royal favor as the price of his
compliance, degradation and exile as the penalty of his
disobedience. Neither zeal nor policy allowed him to hesitate;
and the haughty strain in which Gregory addressed the emperor
displays his confidence in the truth of his doctrine or the
powers of resistance. Without depending on prayers or miracles,
he boldly armed against the public enemy, and his pastoral
letters admonished the Italians of their danger and their duty.
At this signal, Ravenna, Venice, and the cities of the Exarchate
and Pentapolis, adhered to the cause of religion; their military
force by sea and land consisted, for the most part, of the
natives; and the spirit of patriotism and zeal was transfused
into the mercenary strangers. The Italians swore to live and die
in the defence of the pope and the holy images; the Roman people
was devoted to their father, and even the Lombards were ambitious
to share the merit and advantage of this holy war. The most
treasonable act, but the most obvious revenge, was the
destruction of the statues of Leo himself: the most effectual and
pleasing measure of rebellion, was the withholding the tribute of
Italy, and depriving him of a power which he had recently abused
by the imposition of a new capitation. A form of administration
was preserved by the election of magistrates and governors; and
so high was the public indignation, that the Italians were
prepared to create an orthodox emperor, and to conduct him with a
fleet and army to the palace of Constantinople. In that palace,
the Roman bishops, the second and third Gregory, were condemned
as the authors of the revolt, and every attempt was made, either
by fraud or force, to seize their persons, and to strike at their
lives. The city was repeatedly visited or assaulted by captains
of the guards, and dukes and exarchs of high dignity or secret
trust; they landed with foreign troops, they obtained some
domestic aid, and the superstition of Naples may blush that her
fathers were attached to the cause of heresy. But these
clandestine or open attacks were repelled by the courage and
vigilance of the Romans; the Greeks were overthrown and
massacred, their leaders suffered an ignominious death, and the
popes, however inclined to mercy, refused to intercede for these
guilty victims. At Ravenna, the several quarters of the city had
long exercised a bloody and hereditary feud; in religious
controversy they found a new aliment of faction: but the votaries
of images were superior in numbers or spirit, and the exarch, who
attempted to stem the torrent, lost his life in a popular
sedition. To punish this flagitious deed, and restore his
dominion in Italy, the emperor sent a fleet and army into the
Adriatic Gulf. After suffering from the winds and waves much loss
and delay, the Greeks made their descent in the neighborhood of
Ravenna: they threatened to depopulate the guilty capital, and to
imitate, perhaps to surpass, the example of Justinian the Second,
who had chastised a former rebellion by the choice and execution
of fifty of the principal inhabitants. The women and clergy, in
sackcloth and ashes, lay prostrate in prayer: the men were in
arms for the defence of their country; the common danger had
united the factions, and the event of a battle was preferred to
the slow miseries of a siege. In a hard-fought day, as the two
armies alternately yielded and advanced, a phantom was seen, a
voice was heard, and Ravenna was victorious by the assurance of
victory. The strangers retreated to their ships, but the populous
sea-coast poured forth a multitude of boats; the waters of the Po
were so deeply infected with blood, that during six years the
public prejudice abstained from the fish of the river; and the
institution of an annual feast perpetuated the worship of images,
and the abhorrence of the Greek tyrant. Amidst the triumph of the
Catholic arms, the Roman pontiff convened a synod of ninety-three
bishops against the heresy of the Iconoclasts. With their
consent, he pronounced a general excommunication against all who
by word or deed should attack the tradition of the fathers and
the images of the saints: in this sentence the emperor was
tacitly involved, but the vote of a last and hopeless
remonstrance may seem to imply that the anathema was yet
suspended over his guilty head. No sooner had they confirmed
their own safety, the worship of images, and the freedom of Rome
and Italy, than the popes appear to have relaxed of their
severity, and to have spared the relics of the Byzantine
dominion. Their moderate councils delayed and prevented the
election of a new emperor, and they exhorted the Italians not to
separate from the body of the Roman monarchy. The exarch was
permitted to reside within the walls of Ravenna, a captive rather
than a master; and till the Imperial coronation of Charlemagne,
the government of Rome and Italy was exercised in the name of the
successors of Constantine.
The liberty of Rome, which had been oppressed by the arms and
arts of Augustus, was rescued, after seven hundred and fifty
years of servitude, from the persecution of Leo the Isaurian. By
the Cæsars, the triumphs of the consuls had been
annihilated: in the decline and fall of the empire, the god
Terminus, the sacred boundary, had insensibly receded from the
ocean, the Rhine, the Danube, and the Euphrates; and Rome was
reduced to her ancient territory from Viterbo to Terracina, and
from Narni to the mouth of the Tyber. When the kings were
banished, the republic reposed on the firm basis which had been
founded by their wisdom and virtue. Their perpetual jurisdiction
was divided between two annual magistrates: the senate continued
to exercise the powers of administration and counsel; and the
legislative authority was distributed in the assemblies of the
people, by a well-proportioned scale of property and service.
Ignorant of the arts of luxury, the primitive Romans had improved
the science of government and war: the will of the community was
absolute: the rights of individuals were sacred: one hundred and
thirty thousand citizens were armed for defence or conquest; and
a band of robbers and outlaws was moulded into a nation deserving
of freedom and ambitious of glory. When the sovereignty of the
Greek emperors was extinguished, the ruins of Rome presented the
sad image of depopulation and decay: her slavery was a habit, her
liberty an accident; the effect of superstition, and the object
of her own amazement and terror. The last vestige of the
substance, or even the forms, of the constitution, was
obliterated from the practice and memory of the Romans; and they
were devoid of knowledge, or virtue, again to build the fabric of
a commonwealth. Their scanty remnant, the offspring of slaves and
strangers, was despicable in the eyes of the victorious
Barbarians. As often as the Franks or Lombards expressed their
most bitter contempt of a foe, they called him a Roman; "and in
this name," says the bishop Liutprand, "we include whatever is
base, whatever is cowardly, whatever is perfidious, the extremes
of avarice and luxury, and every vice that can prostitute the
dignity of human nature." * By the necessity of their situation,
the inhabitants of Rome were cast into the rough model of a
republican government: they were compelled to elect some judges
in peace, and some leaders in war: the nobles assembled to
deliberate, and their resolves could not be executed without the
union and consent of the multitude. The style of the Roman senate
and people was revived, but the spirit was fled; and their new
independence was disgraced by the tumultuous conflict of
licentiousness and oppression. The want of laws could only be
supplied by the influence of religion, and their foreign and
domestic counsels were moderated by the authority of the bishop.
His alms, his sermons, his correspondence with the kings and
prelates of the West, his recent services, their gratitude, and
oath, accustomed the Romans to consider him as the first
magistrate or prince of the city. The Christian humility of the
popes was not offended by the name of
Dominus, or Lord; and their face and
inscription are still apparent on the most ancient coins. Their
temporal dominion is now confirmed by the reverence of a thousand
years; and their noblest title is the free choice of a people,
whom they had redeemed from slavery.
In the quarrels of ancient Greece, the holy people of Elis
enjoyed a perpetual peace, under the protection of Jupiter, and
in the exercise of the Olympic games. Happy would it have been
for the Romans, if a similar privilege had guarded the patrimony
of St. Peter from the calamities of war; if the Christians, who
visited the holy threshold, would have sheathed their swords in
the presence of the apostle and his successor. But this mystic
circle could have been traced only by the wand of a legislator
and a sage: this pacific system was incompatible with the zeal
and ambition of the popes the Romans were not addicted, like the
inhabitants of Elis, to the innocent and placid labors of
agriculture; and the Barbarians of Italy, though softened by the
climate, were far below the Grecian states in the institutions of
public and private life. A memorable example of repentance and
piety was exhibited by Liutprand, king of the Lombards. In arms,
at the gate of the Vatican, the conqueror listened to the voice
of Gregory the Second, withdrew his troops, resigned his
conquests, respectfully visited the church of St. Peter, and
after performing his devotions, offered his sword and dagger, his
cuirass and mantle, his silver cross, and his crown of gold, on
the tomb of the apostle. But this religious fervor was the
illusion, perhaps the artifice, of the moment; the sense of
interest is strong and lasting; the love of arms and rapine was
congenial to the Lombards; and both the prince and people were
irresistibly tempted by the disorders of Italy, the nakedness of
Rome, and the unwarlike profession of her new chief. On the first
edicts of the emperor, they declared themselves the champions of
the holy images: Liutprand invaded the province of Romagna, which
had already assumed that distinctive appellation; the Catholics
of the Exarchate yielded without reluctance to his civil and
military power; and a foreign enemy was introduced for the first
time into the impregnable fortress of Ravenna. That city and
fortress were speedily recovered by the active diligence and
maritime forces of the Venetians; and those faithful subjects
obeyed the exhortation of Gregory himself, in separating the
personal guilt of Leo from the general cause of the Roman empire.
The Greeks were less mindful of the service, than the Lombards of
the injury: the two nations, hostile in their faith, were
reconciled in a dangerous and unnatural alliance: the king and
the exarch marched to the conquest of Spoleto and Rome: the storm
evaporated without effect, but the policy of Liutprand alarmed
Italy with a vexatious alternative of hostility and truce. His
successor Astolphus declared himself the equal enemy of the
emperor and the pope: Ravenna was subdued by force or treachery,
and this final conquest extinguished the series of the exarchs,
who had reigned with a subordinate power since the time of
Justinian and the ruin of the Gothic kingdom. Rome was summoned
to acknowledge the victorious Lombard as her lawful sovereign;
the annual tribute of a piece of gold was fixed as the ransom of
each citizen, and the sword of destruction was unsheathed to
exact the penalty of her disobedience. The Romans hesitated; they
entreated; they complained; and the threatening Barbarians were
checked by arms and negotiations, till the popes had engaged the
friendship of an ally and avenger beyond the Alps.
In his distress, the first * Gregory had implored the aid of
the hero of the age, of Charles Martel, who governed the French
monarchy with the humble title of mayor or duke; and who, by his
signal victory over the Saracens, had saved his country, and
perhaps Europe, from the Mahometan yoke. The ambassadors of the
pope were received by Charles with decent reverence; but the
greatness of his occupations, and the shortness of his life,
prevented his interference in the affairs of Italy, except by a
friendly and ineffectual mediation. His son Pepin, the heir of
his power and virtues, assumed the office of champion of the
Roman church; and the zeal of the French prince appears to have
been prompted by the love of glory and religion. But the danger
was on the banks of the Tyber, the succor on those of the Seine,
and our sympathy is cold to the relation of distant misery.
Amidst the tears of the city, Stephen the Third embraced the
generous resolution of visiting in person the courts of Lombardy
and France, to deprecate the injustice of his enemy, or to excite
the pity and indignation of his friend. After soothing the public
despair by litanies and orations, he undertook this laborious
journey with the ambassadors of the French monarch and the Greek
emperor. The king of the Lombards was inexorable; but his threats
could not silence the complaints, nor retard the speed of the
Roman pontiff, who traversed the Pennine Alps, reposed in the
abbey of St. Maurice, and hastened to grasp the right hand of his
protector; a hand which was never lifted in vain, either in war
or friendship. Stephen was entertained as the visible successor
of the apostle; at the next assembly, the field of March or of
May, his injuries were exposed to a devout and warlike nation,
and he repassed the Alps, not as a suppliant, but as a conqueror,
at the head of a French army, which was led by the king in
person. The Lombards, after a weak resistance, obtained an
ignominious peace, and swore to restore the possessions, and to
respect the sanctity, of the Roman church. But no sooner was
Astolphus delivered from the presence of the French arms, than he
forgot his promise and resented his disgrace. Rome was again
encompassed by his arms; and Stephen, apprehensive of fatiguing
the zeal of his Transalpine allies enforced his complaint and
request by an eloquent letter in the name and person of St. Peter
himself. The apostle assures his adopted sons, the king, the
clergy, and the nobles of France, that, dead in the flesh, he is
still alive in the spirit; that they now hear, and must obey, the
voice of the founder and guardian of the Roman church; that the
Virgin, the angels, the saints, and the martyrs, and all the host
of heaven, unanimously urge the request, and will confess the
obligation; that riches, victory, and paradise, will crown their
pious enterprise, and that eternal damnation will be the penalty
of their neglect, if they suffer his tomb, his temple, and his
people, to fall into the hands of the perfidious Lombards. The
second expedition of Pepin was not less rapid and fortunate than
the first: St. Peter was satisfied, Rome was again saved, and
Astolphus was taught the lessons of justice and sincerity by the
scourge of a foreign master. After this double chastisement, the
Lombards languished about twenty years in a state of languor and
decay. But their minds were not yet humbled to their condition;
and instead of affecting the pacific virtues of the feeble, they
peevishly harassed the Romans with a repetition of claims,
evasions, and inroads, which they undertook without reflection,
and terminated without glory. On either side, their expiring
monarchy was pressed by the zeal and prudence of Pope Adrian the
First, the genius, the fortune, and greatness of Charlemagne, the
son of Pepin; these heroes of the church and state were united in
public and domestic friendship, and while they trampled on the
prostrate, they varnished their proceedings with the fairest
colors of equity and moderation. The passes of the Alps, and the
walls of Pavia, were the only defence of the Lombards; the former
were surprised, the latter were invested, by the son of Pepin;
and after a blockade of two years, * Desiderius, the last of
their native princes, surrendered his sceptre and his capital.
Under the dominion of a foreign king, but in the possession of
their national laws, the Lombards became the brethren, rather
than the subjects, of the Franks; who derived their blood, and
manners, and language, from the same Germanic origin.
Chapter XLIX: Conquest Of Italy By The Franks. --
Part III.
The mutual obligations of the popes and the Carlovingian
family form the important link of ancient and modern, of civil
and ecclesiastical, history. In the conquest of Italy, the
champions of the Roman church obtained a favorable occasion, a
specious title, the wishes of the people, the prayers and
intrigues of the clergy. But the most essential gifts of the
popes to the Carlovingian race were the dignities of king of
France, and of patrician of Rome. I. Under the sacerdotal
monarchy of St. Peter, the nations began to resume the practice
of seeking, on the banks of the Tyber, their kings, their laws,
and the oracles of their fate. The Franks were perplexed between
the name and substance of their government. All the powers of
royalty were exercised by Pepin, mayor of the palace; and
nothing, except the regal title, was wanting to his ambition. His
enemies were crushed by his valor; his friends were multiplied by
his liberality; his father had been the savior of Christendom;
and the claims of personal merit were repeated and ennobled in a
descent of four generations. The name and image of royalty was
still preserved in the last descendant of Clovis, the feeble
Childeric; but his obsolete right could only be used as an
instrument of sedition: the nation was desirous of restoring the
simplicity of the constitution; and Pepin, a subject and a
prince, was ambitious to ascertain his own rank and the fortune
of his family. The mayor and the nobles were bound, by an oath of
fidelity, to the royal phantom: the blood of Clovis was pure and
sacred in their eyes; and their common ambassadors addressed the
Roman pontiff, to dispel their scruples, or to absolve their
promise. The interest of Pope Zachary, the successor of the two
Gregories, prompted him to decide, and to decide in their favor:
he pronounced that the nation might lawfully unite in the same
person the title and authority of king; and that the unfortunate
Childeric, a victim of the public safety, should be degraded,
shaved, and confined in a monastery for the remainder of his
days. An answer so agreeable to their wishes was accepted by the
Franks as the opinion of a casuist, the sentence of a judge, or
the oracle of a prophet: the Merovingian race disappeared from
the earth; and Pepin was exalted on a buckler by the suffrage of
a free people, accustomed to obey his laws and to march under his
standard. His coronation was twice performed, with the sanction
of the popes, by their most faithful servant St. Boniface, the
apostle of Germany, and by the grateful hands of Stephen the
Third, who, in the monastery of St. Denys placed the diadem on
the head of his benefactor. The royal unction of the kings of
Israel was dexterously applied: the successor of St. Peter
assumed the character of a divine ambassador: a German chieftain
was transformed into the Lord's anointed; and this Jewish rite
has been diffused and maintained by the superstition and vanity
of modern Europe. The Franks were absolved from their ancient
oath; but a dire anathema was thundered against them and their
posterity, if they should dare to renew the same freedom of
choice, or to elect a king, except in the holy and meritorious
race of the Carlovingian princes. Without apprehending the future
danger, these princes gloried in their present security: the
secretary of Charlemagne affirms, that the French sceptre was
transferred by the authority of the popes; and in their boldest
enterprises, they insist, with confidence, on this signal and
successful act of temporal jurisdiction.
II. In the change of manners and language the patricians of
Rome were far removed from the senate of Romulus, on the palace
of Constantine, from the free nobles of the republic, or the
fictitious parents of the emperor. After the recovery of Italy
and Africa by the arms of Justinian, the importance and danger of
those remote provinces required the presence of a supreme
magistrate; he was indifferently styled the exarch or the
patrician; and these governors of Ravenna, who fill their place
in the chronology of princes, extended their jurisdiction over
the Roman city. Since the revolt of Italy and the loss of the
Exarchate, the distress of the Romans had exacted some sacrifice
of their independence. Yet, even in this act, they exercised the
right of disposing of themselves; and the decrees of the senate
and people successively invested Charles Martel and his posterity
with the honors of patrician of Rome. The leaders of a powerful
nation would have disdained a servile title and subordinate
office; but the reign of the Greek emperors was suspended; and,
in the vacancy of the empire, they derived a more glorious
commission from the pope and the republic. The Roman ambassadors
presented these patricians with the keys of the shrine of St.
Peter, as a pledge and symbol of sovereignty; with a holy banner
which it was their right and duty to unfurl in the defence of the
church and city. In the time of Charles Martel and of Pepin, the
interposition of the Lombard kingdom covered the freedom, while
it threatened the safety, of Rome; and the
patriciate represented only the title,
the service, the alliance, of these distant protectors. The power
and policy of Charlemagne annihilated an enemy, and imposed a
master. In his first visit to the capital, he was received with
all the honors which had formerly been paid to the exarch, the
representative of the emperor; and these honors obtained some new
decorations from the joy and gratitude of Pope Adrian the First.
No sooner was he informed of the sudden approach of the monarch,
than he despatched the magistrates and nobles of Rome to meet
him, with the banner, about thirty miles from the city. At the
distance of one mile, the Flaminian way was lined with the
schools, or national communities, of
Greeks, Lombards, Saxons, &c.: the Roman youth were under
arms; and the children of a more tender age, with palms and olive
branches in their hands, chanted the praises of their great
deliverer. At the aspect of the holy crosses, and ensigns of the
saints, he dismounted from his horse, led the procession of his
nobles to the Vatican, and, as he ascended the stairs, devoutly
kissed each step of the threshold of the apostles. In the
portico, Adrian expected him at the head of his clergy: they
embraced, as friends and equals; but in their march to the altar,
the king or patrician assumed the right hand of the pope. Nor was
the Frank content with these vain and empty demonstrations of
respect. In the twenty-six years that elapsed between the
conquest of Lombardy and his Imperial coronation, Rome, which had
been delivered by the sword, was subject, as his own, to the
sceptre of Charlemagne. The people swore allegiance to his person
and family: in his name money was coined, and justice was
administered; and the election of the popes was examined and
confirmed by his authority. Except an original and self-inherent
claim of sovereignty, there was not any prerogative remaining,
which the title of emperor could add to the patrician of
Rome.
The gratitude of the Carlovingians was adequate to these
obligations, and their names are consecrated, as the saviors and
benefactors of the Roman church. Her ancient patrimony of farms
and houses was transformed by their bounty into the temporal
dominion of cities and provinces; and the donation of the
Exarchate was the first-fruits of the conquests of Pepin.
Astolphus with a sigh relinquished his prey; the keys and the
hostages of the principal cities were delivered to the French
ambassador; and, in his master's name, he presented them before
the tomb of St. Peter. The ample measure of the Exarchate might
comprise all the provinces of Italy which had obeyed the emperor
and his vicegerent; but its strict and proper limits were
included in the territories of Ravenna, Bologna, and Ferrara: its
inseparable dependency was the Pentapolis, which stretched along
the Adriatic from Rimini to Ancona, and advanced into the
midland-country as far as the ridges of the Apennine. In this
transaction, the ambition and avarice of the popes have been
severely condemned. Perhaps the humility of a Christian priest
should have rejected an earthly kingdom, which it was not easy
for him to govern without renouncing the virtues of his
profession. Perhaps a faithful subject, or even a generous enemy,
would have been less impatient to divide the spoils of the
Barbarian; and if the emperor had intrusted Stephen to solicit in
his name the restitution of the Exarchate, I will not absolve the
pope from the reproach of treachery and falsehood. But in the
rigid interpretation of the laws, every one may accept, without
injury, whatever his benefactor can bestow without injustice. The
Greek emperor had abdicated, or forfeited, his right to the
Exarchate; and the sword of Astolphus was broken by the stronger
sword of the Carlovingian. It was not in the cause of the
Iconoclast that Pepin has exposed his person and army in a double
expedition beyond the Alps: he possessed, and might lawfully
alienate, his conquests: and to the importunities of the Greeks
he piously replied that no human consideration should tempt him
to resume the gift which he had conferred on the Roman Pontiff
for the remission of his sins, and the salvation of his soul. The
splendid donation was granted in supreme and absolute dominion,
and the world beheld for the first time a Christian bishop
invested with the prerogatives of a temporal prince; the choice
of magistrates, the exercise of justice, the imposition of taxes,
and the wealth of the palace of Ravenna. In the dissolution of
the Lombard kingdom, the inhabitants of the duchy of Spoleto
sought a refuge from the storm, shaved their heads after the
Roman fashion, declared themselves the servants and subjects of
St. Peter, and completed, by this voluntary surrender, the
present circle of the ecclesiastical state. That mysterious
circle was enlarged to an indefinite extent, by the verbal or
written donation of Charlemagne, who, in the first transports of
his victory, despoiled himself and the Greek emperor of the
cities and islands which had formerly been annexed to the
Exarchate. But, in the cooler moments of absence and reflection,
he viewed, with an eye of jealousy and envy, the recent greatness
of his ecclesiastical ally. The execution of his own and his
father's promises was respectfully eluded: the king of the Franks
and Lombards asserted the inalienable rights of the empire; and,
in his life and death, Ravenna, as well as Rome, was numbered in
the list of his metropolitan cities. The sovereignty of the
Exarchate melted away in the hands of the popes; they found in
the archbishops of Ravenna a dangerous and domestic rival: the
nobles and people disdained the yoke of a priest; and in the
disorders of the times, they could only retain the memory of an
ancient claim, which, in a more prosperous age, they have revived
and realized.
Fraud is the resource of weakness and cunning; and the strong,
though ignorant, Barbarian was often entangled in the net of
sacerdotal policy. The Vatican and Lateran were an arsenal and
manufacture, which, according to the occasion, have produced or
concealed a various collection of false or genuine, of corrupt or
suspicious, acts, as they tended to promote the interest of the
Roman church. Before the end of the eighth century, some
apostolic scribe, perhaps the notorious Isidore, composed the
decretals, and the donation of Constantine, the two magic pillars
of the spiritual and temporal monarchy of the popes. This
memorable donation was introduced to the world by an epistle of
Adrian the First, who exhorts Charlemagne to imitate the
liberality, and revive the name, of the great Constantine.
According to the legend, the first of the Christian emperors was
healed of the leprosy, and purified in the waters of baptism, by
St. Silvester, the Roman bishop; and never was physician more
gloriously recompensed. His royal proselyte withdrew from the
seat and patrimony of St. Peter; declared his resolution of
founding a new capital in the East; and resigned to the popes the
free and perpetual sovereignty of Rome, Italy, and the provinces
of the West. This fiction was productive of the most beneficial
effects. The Greek princes were convicted of the guilt of
usurpation; and the revolt of Gregory was the claim of his lawful
inheritance. The popes were delivered from their debt of
gratitude; and the nominal gifts of the Carlovingians were no
more than the just and irrevocable restitution of a scanty
portion of the ecclesiastical state. The sovereignty of Rome no
longer depended on the choice of a fickle people; and the
successors of St. Peter and Constantine were invested with the
purple and prerogatives of the Cæsars. So deep was the
ignorance and credulity of the times, that the most absurd of
fables was received, with equal reverence, in Greece and in
France, and is still enrolled among the decrees of the canon law.
The emperors, and the Romans, were incapable of discerning a
forgery, that subverted their rights and freedom; and the only
opposition proceeded from a Sabine monastery, which, in the
beginning of the twelfth century, disputed the truth and validity
of the donation of Constantine. In the revival of letters and
liberty, this fictitious deed was transpierced by the pen of
Laurentius Valla, the pen of an eloquent critic and a Roman
patriot. His contemporaries of the fifteenth century were
astonished at his sacrilegious boldness; yet such is the silent
and irresistible progress of reason, that, before the end of the
next age, the fable was rejected by the contempt of historians
and poets, and the tacit or modest censure of the advocates of
the Roman church. The popes themselves have indulged a smile at
the credulity of the vulgar; but a false and obsolete title still
sanctifies their reign; and, by the same fortune which has
attended the decretals and the Sibylline oracles, the edifice has
subsisted after the foundations have been undermined.
While the popes established in Italy their freedom and
dominion, the images, the first cause of their revolt, were
restored in the Eastern empire. Under the reign of Constantine
the Fifth, the union of civil and ecclesiastical power had
overthrown the tree, without extirpating the root, of
superstition. The idols (for such they were now held) were
secretly cherished by the order and the sex most prone to
devotion; and the fond alliance of the monks and females obtained
a final victory over the reason and authority of man. Leo the
Fourth maintained with less rigor the religion of his father and
grandfather; but his wife, the fair and ambitious Irene, had
imbibed the zeal of the Athenians, the heirs of the Idolatry,
rather than the philosophy, of their ancestors. During the life
of her husband, these sentiments were inflamed by danger and
dissimulation, and she could only labor to protect and promote
some favorite monks whom she drew from their caverns, and seated
on the metropolitan thrones of the East. But as soon as she
reigned in her own name and that of her son, Irene more seriously
undertook the ruin of the Iconoclasts; and the first step of her
future persecution was a general edict for liberty of conscience.
In the restoration of the monks, a thousand images were exposed
to the public veneration; a thousand legends were inverted of
their sufferings and miracles. By the opportunities of death or
removal, the episcopal seats were judiciously filled the most
eager competitors for earthly or celestial favor anticipated and
flattered the judgment of their sovereign; and the promotion of
her secretary Tarasius gave Irene the patriarch of
Constantinople, and the command of the Oriental church. But the
decrees of a general council could only be repealed by a similar
assembly: the Iconoclasts whom she convened were bold in
possession, and averse to debate; and the feeble voice of the
bishops was reechoed by the more formidable clamor of the
soldiers and people of Constantinople. The delay and intrigues of
a year, the separation of the disaffected troops, and the choice
of Nice for a second orthodox synod, removed these obstacles; and
the episcopal conscience was again, after the Greek fashion, in
the hands of the prince. No more than eighteen days were allowed
for the consummation of this important work: the Iconoclasts
appeared, not as judges, but as criminals or penitents: the scene
was decorated by the legates of Pope Adrian and the Eastern
patriarchs, the decrees were framed by the president Taracius,
and ratified by the acclamations and subscriptions of three
hundred and fifty bishops. They unanimously pronounced, that the
worship of images is agreeable to Scripture and reason, to the
fathers and councils of the church: but they hesitate whether
that worship be relative or direct; whether the Godhead, and the
figure of Christ, be entitled to the same mode of adoration. Of
this second Nicene council the acts are still extant; a curious
monument of superstition and ignorance, of falsehood and folly. I
shall only notice the judgment of the bishops on the comparative
merit of image-worship and morality. A monk had concluded a truce
with the dæmon of fornication, on condition of interrupting
his daily prayers to a picture that hung in his cell. His
scruples prompted him to consult the abbot. "Rather than abstain
from adoring Christ and his Mother in their holy images, it would
be better for you," replied the casuist, "to enter every brothel,
and visit every prostitute, in the city." For the honor of
orthodoxy, at least the orthodoxy of the Roman church, it is
somewhat unfortunate, that the two princes who convened the two
councils of Nice are both stained with the blood of their sons.
The second of these assemblies was approved and rigorously
executed by the despotism of Irene, and she refused her
adversaries the toleration which at first she had granted to her
friends. During the five succeeding reigns, a period of
thirty-eight years, the contest was maintained, with unabated
rage and various success, between the worshippers and the
breakers of the images; but I am not inclined to pursue with
minute diligence the repetition of the same events. Nicephorus
allowed a general liberty of speech and practice; and the only
virtue of his reign is accused by the monks as the cause of his
temporal and eternal perdition. Superstition and weakness formed
the character of Michael the First, but the saints and images
were incapable of supporting their votary on the throne. In the
purple, Leo the Fifth asserted the name and religion of an
Armenian; and the idols, with their seditious adherents, were
condemned to a second exile. Their applause would have sanctified
the murder of an impious tyrant, but his assassin and successor,
the second Michael, was tainted from his birth with the Phrygian
heresies: he attempted to mediate between the contending parties;
and the intractable spirit of the Catholics insensibly cast him
into the opposite scale. His moderation was guarded by timidity;
but his son Theophilus, alike ignorant of fear and pity, was the
last and most cruel of the Iconoclasts. The enthusiasm of the
times ran strongly against them; and the emperors who stemmed the
torrent were exasperated and punished by the public hatred. After
the death of Theophilus, the final victory of the images was
achieved by a second female, his widow Theodora, whom he left the
guardian of the empire. Her measures were bold and decisive. The
fiction of a tardy repentance absolved the fame and the soul of
her deceased husband; the sentence of the Iconoclast patriarch
was commuted from the loss of his eyes to a whipping of two
hundred lashes: the bishops trembled, the monks shouted, and the
festival of orthodoxy preserves the annual memory of the triumph
of the images. A single question yet remained, whether they are
endowed with any proper and inherent sanctity; it was agitated by
the Greeks of the eleventh century; and as this opinion has the
strongest recommendation of absurdity, I am surprised that it was
not more explicitly decided in the affirmative. In the West, Pope
Adrian the First accepted and announced the decrees of the Nicene
assembly, which is now revered by the Catholics as the seventh in
rank of the general councils. Rome and Italy were docile to the
voice of their father; but the greatest part of the Latin
Christians were far behind in the race of superstition. The
churches of France, Germany, England, and Spain, steered a middle
course between the adoration and the destruction of images, which
they admitted into their temples, not as objects of worship, but
as lively and useful memorials of faith and history. An angry
book of controversy was composed and published in the name of
Charlemagne: under his authority a synod of three hundred bishops
was assembled at Frankfort: they blamed the fury of the
Iconoclasts, but they pronounced a more severe censure against
the superstition of the Greeks, and the decrees of their
pretended council, which was long despised by the Barbarians of
the West. Among them the worship of images advanced with a silent
and insensible progress; but a large atonement is made for their
hesitation and delay, by the gross idolatry of the ages which
precede the reformation, and of the countries, both in Europe and
America, which are still immersed in the gloom of
superstition.
Chapter XLIX: Conquest Of Italy By The Franks. --
Part IV.
It was after the Nicene synod, and under the reign of the
pious Irene, that the popes consummated the separation of Rome
and Italy, by the translation of the empire to the less orthodox
Charlemagne. They were compelled to choose between the rival
nations: religion was not the sole motive of their choice; and
while they dissembled the failings of their friends, they beheld,
with reluctance and suspicion, the Catholic virtues of their
foes. The difference of language and manners had perpetuated the
enmity of the two capitals; and they were alienated from each
other by the hostile opposition of seventy years. In that schism
the Romans had tasted of freedom, and the popes of sovereignty:
their submission would have exposed them to the revenge of a
jealous tyrant; and the revolution of Italy had betrayed the
impotence, as well as the tyranny, of the Byzantine court. The
Greek emperors had restored the images, but they had not restored
the Calabrian estates and the Illyrian diocese, which the
Iconoclasts had torn away from the successors of St. Peter; and
Pope Adrian threatens them with a sentence of excommunication
unless they speedily abjure this practical heresy. The Greeks
were now orthodox; but their religion might be tainted by the
breath of the reigning monarch: the Franks were now contumacious;
but a discerning eye might discern their approaching conversion,
from the use, to the adoration, of images. The name of
Charlemagne was stained by the polemic acrimony of his scribes;
but the conqueror himself conformed, with the temper of a
statesman, to the various practice of France and Italy. In his
four pilgrimages or visits to the Vatican, he embraced the popes
in the communion of friendship and piety; knelt before the tomb,
and consequently before the image, of the apostle; and joined,
without scruple, in all the prayers and processions of the Roman
liturgy. Would prudence or gratitude allow the pontiffs to
renounce their benefactor? Had they a right to alienate his gift
of the Exarchate? Had they power to abolish his government of
Rome? The title of patrician was below the merit and greatness of
Charlemagne; and it was only by reviving the Western empire that
they could pay their obligations or secure their establishment.
By this decisive measure they would finally eradicate the claims
of the Greeks; from the debasement of a provincial town, the
majesty of Rome would be restored: the Latin Christians would be
united, under a supreme head, in their ancient metropolis; and
the conquerors of the West would receive their crown from the
successors of St. Peter. The Roman church would acquire a zealous
and respectable advocate; and, under the shadow of the
Carlovingian power, the bishop might exercise, with honor and
safety, the government of the city.
Before the ruin of Paganism in Rome, the competition for a
wealthy bishopric had often been productive of tumult and
bloodshed. The people was less numerous, but the times were more
savage, the prize more important, and the chair of St. Peter was
fiercely disputed by the leading ecclesiastics who aspired to the
rank of sovereign. The reign of Adrian the First surpasses the
measure of past or succeeding ages; the walls of Rome, the sacred
patrimony, the ruin of the Lombards, and the friendship of
Charlemagne, were the trophies of his fame: he secretly edified
the throne of his successors, and displayed in a narrow space the
virtues of a great prince. His memory was revered; but in the
next election, a priest of the Lateran, Leo the Third, was
preferred to the nephew and the favorite of Adrian, whom he had
promoted to the first dignities of the church. Their acquiescence
or repentance disguised, above four years, the blackest intention
of revenge, till the day of a procession, when a furious band of
conspirators dispersed the unarmed multitude, and assaulted with
blows and wounds the sacred person of the pope. But their
enterprise on his life or liberty was disappointed, perhaps by
their own confusion and remorse. Leo was left for dead on the
ground: on his revival from the swoon, the effect of his loss of
blood, he recovered his speech and sight; and this natural event
was improved to the miraculous restoration of his eyes and
tongue, of which he had been deprived, twice deprived, by the
knife of the assassins. From his prison he escaped to the
Vatican: the duke of Spoleto hastened to his rescue, Charlemagne
sympathized in his injury, and in his camp of Paderborn in
Westphalia accepted, or solicited, a visit from the Roman
pontiff. Leo repassed the Alps with a commission of counts and
bishops, the guards of his safety and the judges of his
innocence; and it was not without reluctance, that the conqueror
of the Saxons delayed till the ensuing year the personal
discharge of this pious office. In his fourth and last
pilgrimage, he was received at Rome with the due honors of king
and patrician: Leo was permitted to purge himself by oath of the
crimes imputed to his charge: his enemies were silenced, and the
sacrilegious attempt against his life was punished by the mild
and insufficient penalty of exile. On the festival of Christmas,
the last year of the eighth century, Charlemagne appeared in the
church of St. Peter; and, to gratify the vanity of Rome, he had
exchanged the simple dress of his country for the habit of a
patrician. After the celebration of the holy mysteries, Leo
suddenly placed a precious crown on his head, and the dome
resounded with the acclamations of the people, "Long life and
victory to Charles, the most pious Augustus, crowned by God the
great and pacific emperor of the Romans!" The head and body of
Charlemagne were consecrated by the royal unction: after the
example of the Cæsars, he was saluted or adored by the
pontiff: his coronation oath represents a promise to maintain the
faith and privileges of the church; and the first-fruits were
paid in his rich offerings to the shrine of his apostle. In his
familiar conversation, the emperor protested the ignorance of the
intentions of Leo, which he would have disappointed by his
absence on that memorable day. But the preparations of the
ceremony must have disclosed the secret; and the journey of
Charlemagne reveals his knowledge and expectation: he had
acknowledged that the Imperial title was the object of his
ambition, and a Roman synod had pronounced, that it was the only
adequate reward of his merit and services.
The appellation of great has been
often bestowed, and sometimes deserved; but Charlemagne is the
only prince in whose favor the title has been indissolubly
blended with the name. That name, with the addition of
saint, is inserted in the Roman
calendar; and the saint, by a rare felicity, is crowned with the
praises of the historians and philosophers of an enlightened age.
His real merit is doubtless enhanced by
the barbarism of the nation and the times from which he emerged:
but the apparent magnitude of an object
is likewise enlarged by an unequal comparison; and the ruins of
Palmyra derive a casual splendor from the nakedness of the
surrounding desert. Without injustice to his fame, I may discern
some blemishes in the sanctity and greatness of the restorer of
the Western empire. Of his moral virtues, chastity is not the
most conspicuous: but the public happiness could not be
materially injured by his nine wives or concubines, the various
indulgence of meaner or more transient amours, the multitude of
his bastards whom he bestowed on the church, and the long
celibacy and licentious manners of his daughters, whom the father
was suspected of loving with too fond a passion. * I shall be
scarcely permitted to accuse the ambition of a conqueror; but in
a day of equal retribution, the sons of his brother Carloman, the
Merovingian princes of Aquitain, and the four thousand five
hundred Saxons who were beheaded on the same spot, would have
something to allege against the justice and humanity of
Charlemagne. His treatment of the vanquished Saxons was an abuse
of the right of conquest; his laws were not less sanguinary than
his arms, and in the discussion of his motives, whatever is
subtracted from bigotry must be imputed to temper. The sedentary
reader is amazed by his incessant activity of mind and body; and
his subjects and enemies were not less astonished at his sudden
presence, at the moment when they believed him at the most
distant extremity of the empire; neither peace nor war, nor
summer nor winter, were a season of repose; and our fancy cannot
easily reconcile the annals of his reign with the geography of
his expeditions. But this activity was a national, rather than a
personal, virtue; the vagrant life of a Frank was spent in the
chase, in pilgrimage, in military adventures; and the journeys of
Charlemagne were distinguished only by a more numerous train and
a more important purpose. His military renown must be tried by
the scrutiny of his troops, his enemies, and his actions.
Alexander conquered with the arms of Philip, but the
two heroes who preceded Charlemagne
bequeathed him their name, their examples, and the companions of
their victories. At the head of his veteran and superior armies,
he oppressed the savage or degenerate nations, who were incapable
of confederating for their common safety: nor did he ever
encounter an equal antagonist in numbers, in discipline, or in
arms The science of war has been lost and revived with the arts
of peace; but his campaigns are not illustrated by any siege or
battle of singular difficulty and success; and he might behold,
with envy, the Saracen trophies of his grandfather. After the
Spanish expedition, his rear-guard was defeated in the
Pyrenæan mountains; and the soldiers, whose situation was
irretrievable, and whose valor was useless, might accuse, with
their last breath, the want of skill or caution of their general.
I touch with reverence the laws of Charlemagne, so highly
applauded by a respectable judge. They compose not a system, but
a series, of occasional and minute edicts, for the correction of
abuses, the reformation of manners, the economy of his farms, the
care of his poultry, and even the sale of his eggs. He wished to
improve the laws and the character of the Franks; and his
attempts, however feeble and imperfect, are deserving of praise:
the inveterate evils of the times were suspended or mollified by
his government; but in his institutions I can seldom discover the
general views and the immortal spirit of a legislator, who
survives himself for the benefit of posterity. The union and
stability of his empire depended on the life of a single man: he
imitated the dangerous practice of dividing his kingdoms among
his sons; and after his numerous diets, the whole constitution
was left to fluctuate between the disorders of anarchy and
despotism. His esteem for the piety and knowledge of the clergy
tempted him to intrust that aspiring order with temporal dominion
and civil jurisdiction; and his son Lewis, when he was stripped
and degraded by the bishops, might accuse, in some measure, the
imprudence of his father. His laws enforced the imposition of
tithes, because the dæmons had proclaimed in the air that
the default of payment had been the cause of the last scarcity.
The literary merits of Charlemagne are attested by the foundation
of schools, the introduction of arts, the works which were
published in his name, and his familiar connection with the
subjects and strangers whom he invited to his court to educate
both the prince and people. His own studies were tardy,
laborious, and imperfect; if he spoke Latin, and understood
Greek, he derived the rudiments of knowledge from conversation,
rather than from books; and, in his mature age, the emperor
strove to acquire the practice of writing, which every peasant
now learns in his infancy. The grammar and logic, the music and
astronomy, of the times, were only cultivated as the handmaids of
superstition; but the curiosity of the human mind must ultimately
tend to its improvement, and the encouragement of learning
reflects the purest and most pleasing lustre on the character of
Charlemagne. The dignity of his person, the length of his reign,
the prosperity of his arms, the vigor of his government, and the
reverence of distant nations, distinguish him from the royal
crowd; and Europe dates a new æra from his restoration of
the Western empire.
That empire was not unworthy of its title; and some of the
fairest kingdoms of Europe were the patrimony or conquest of a
prince, who reigned at the same time in France, Spain, Italy,
Germany, and Hungary. I. The Roman province of Gaul had been
transformed into the name and monarchy of France; but, in the
decay of the Merovingian line, its limits were contracted by the
independence of the Britonsand the
revolt of Aquitain. Charlemagne
pursued, and confined, the Britons on the shores of the ocean;
and that ferocious tribe, whose origin and language are so
different from the French, was chastised by the imposition of
tribute, hostages, and peace. After a long and evasive contest,
the rebellion of the dukes of Aquitain was punished by the
forfeiture of their province, their liberty, and their lives.
Harsh and rigorous would have been such treatment of ambitious
governors, who had too faithfully copied the mayors of the
palace. But a recent discovery has proved that these unhappy
princes were the last and lawful heirs of the blood and sceptre
of Clovis, and younger branch, from the brother of Dagobert, of
the Merovingian house. Their ancient kingdom was reduced to the
duchy of Gascogne, to the counties of Fesenzac and Armagnac, at
the foot of the Pyrenees: their race was propagated till the
beginning of the sixteenth century; and after surviving their
Carlovingian tyrants, they were reserved to feel the injustice,
or the favors, of a third dynasty. By the reunion of Aquitain,
France was enlarged to its present boundaries, with the additions
of the Netherlands and Spain, as far as the Rhine. II. The
Saracens had been expelled from France by the grandfather and
father of Charlemagne; but they still possessed the greatest part
of Spain, from the rock of Gibraltar to the Pyrenees. Amidst
their civil divisions, an Arabian emir of Saragossa implored his
protection in the diet of Paderborn. Charlemagne undertook the
expedition, restored the emir, and, without distinction of faith,
impartially crushed the resistance of the Christians, and
rewarded the obedience and services of the Mahometans. In his
absence he instituted the Spanish
march, which extended from the Pyrenees to the
River Ebro: Barcelona was the residence of the French governor:
he possessed the counties of Rousillon
and Catalonia; and the infant kingdoms
of Navarre and
Arragon were subject to his
jurisdiction. III. As king of the Lombards, and patrician of
Rome, he reigned over the greatest part of Italy, a tract of a
thousand miles from the Alps to the borders of Calabria. The
duchy of Beneventum, a Lombard fief,
had spread, at the expense of the Greeks, over the modern kingdom
of Naples. But Arrechis, the reigning duke, refused to be
included in the slavery of his country; assumed the independent
title of prince; and opposed his sword to the Carlovingian
monarchy. His defence was firm, his submission was not
inglorious, and the emperor was content with an easy tribute, the
demolition of his fortresses, and the acknowledgment, on his
coins, of a supreme lord. The artful flattery of his son Grimoald
added the appellation of father, but he asserted his dignity with
prudence, and Benventum insensibly escaped from the French yoke.
IV. Charlemagne was the first who united Germany under the same
sceptre. The name of Oriental France is
preserved in the circle of Franconia;
and the people of Hesse and
Thuringia were recently incorporated
with the victors, by the conformity of religion and government.
The Alemanni, so formidable to the
Romans, were the faithful vassals and confederates of the Franks;
and their country was inscribed within the modern limits of
Alsace,
Swabia, and
Switzerland. The
Bavarians, with a similar indulgence of
their laws and manners, were less patient of a master: the
repeated treasons of Tasillo justified the abolition of their
hereditary dukes; and their power was shared among the counts,
who judged and guarded that important frontier. But the north of
Germany, from the Rhine and beyond the Elbe, was still hostile
and Pagan; nor was it till after a war of thirty-three years that
the Saxons bowed under the yoke of Christ and of Charlemagne. The
idols and their votaries were extirpated: the foundation of eight
bishoprics, of Munster, Osnaburgh, Paderborn, and Minden, of
Bremen, Verden, Hildesheim, and Halberstadt, define, on either
side of the Weser, the bounds of ancient Saxony these episcopal
seats were the first schools and cities of that savage land; and
the religion and humanity of the children atoned, in some degree,
for the massacre of the parents. Beyond the Elbe, the
Slavi, or Sclavonians, of similar
manners and various denominations, overspread the modern
dominions of Prussia, Poland, and Bohemia, and some transient
marks of obedience have tempted the French historian to extend
the empire to the Baltic and the Vistula. The conquest or
conversion of those countries is of a more recent age; but the
first union of Bohemia with the
Germanic body may be justly ascribed to the arms of Charlemagne.
V. He retaliated on the Avars, or Huns of Pannonia, the same
calamities which they had inflicted on the nations. Their rings,
the wooden fortifications which encircled their districts and
villages, were broken down by the triple effort of a French army,
that was poured into their country by land and water, through the
Carpathian mountains and along the plain of the Danube. After a
bloody conflict of eight years, the loss of some French generals
was avenged by the slaughter of the most noble Huns: the relics
of the nation submitted the royal residence of the chagan was
left desolate and unknown; and the treasures, the rapine of two
hundred and fifty years, enriched the victorious troops, or
decorated the churches of Italy and Gaul. After the reduction of
Pannonia, the empire of Charlemagne was bounded only by the
conflux of the Danube with the Teyss and the Save: the provinces
of Istria, Liburnia, and Dalmatia, were an easy, though
unprofitable, accession; and it was an effect of his moderation,
that he left the maritime cities under the real or nominal
sovereignty of the Greeks. But these distant possessions added
more to the reputation than to the power of the Latin emperor;
nor did he risk any ecclesiastical foundations to reclaim the
Barbarians from their vagrant life and idolatrous worship. Some
canals of communication between the rivers, the Saone and the
Meuse, the Rhine and the Danube, were faintly attempted. Their
execution would have vivified the empire; and more cost and labor
were often wasted in the structure of a cathedral. *
Chapter XLIX: Conquest Of Italy By The Franks. --
Part V.
If we retrace the outlines of this geographical picture, it
will be seen that the empire of the Franks extended, between east
and west, from the Ebro to the Elbe or Vistula; between the north
and south, from the duchy of Beneventum to the River Eyder, the
perpetual boundary of Germany and Denmark. The personal and
political importance of Charlemagne was magnified by the distress
and division of the rest of Europe. The islands of Great Britain
and Ireland were disputed by a crowd of princes of Saxon or
Scottish origin: and, after the loss of Spain, the Christian and
Gothic kingdom of Alphonso the Chaste was confined to the narrow
range of the Asturian mountains. These petty sovereigns revered
the power or virtue of the Carlovingian monarch, implored the
honor and support of his alliance, and styled him their common
parent, the sole and supreme emperor of the West. He maintained a
more equal intercourse with the caliph Harun al Rashid, whose
dominion stretched from Africa to India, and accepted from his
ambassadors a tent, a water-clock, an elephant, and the keys of
the Holy Sepulchre. It is not easy to conceive the private
friendship of a Frank and an Arab, who were strangers to each
other's person, and language, and religion: but their public
correspondence was founded on vanity, and their remote situation
left no room for a competition of interest. Two thirds of the
Western empire of Rome were subject to Charlemagne, and the
deficiency was amply supplied by his command of the inaccessible
or invincible nations of Germany. But in the choice of his
enemies, * we may be reasonably surprised that he so often
preferred the poverty of the north to the riches of the south.
The three-and-thirty campaigns laboriously consumed in the woods
and morasses of Germany would have sufficed to assert the
amplitude of his title by the expulsion of the Greeks from Italy
and the Saracens from Spain. The weakness of the Greeks would
have insured an easy victory; and the holy crusade against the
Saracens would have been prompted by glory and revenge, and
loudly justified by religion and policy. Perhaps, in his
expeditions beyond the Rhine and the Elbe, he aspired to save his
monarchy from the fate of the Roman empire, to disarm the enemies
of civilized society, and to eradicate the seed of future
emigrations. But it has been wisely observed, that, in a light of
precaution, all conquest must be ineffectual, unless it could be
universal, since the increasing circle must be involved in a
larger sphere of hostility. The subjugation of Germany withdrew
the veil which had so long concealed the continent or islands of
Scandinavia from the knowledge of Europe, and awakened the torpid
courage of their barbarous natives. The fiercest of the Saxon
idolaters escaped from the Christian tyrant to their brethren of
the North; the Ocean and Mediterranean were covered with their
piratical fleets; and Charlemagne beheld with a sigh the
destructive progress of the Normans, who, in less than seventy
years, precipitated the fall of his race and monarchy.
Had the pope and the Romans revived the primitive
constitution, the titles of emperor and Augustus were conferred
on Charlemagne for the term of his life; and his successors, on
each vacancy, must have ascended the throne by a formal or tacit
election. But the association of his son Lewis the Pious asserts
the independent right of monarchy and conquest, and the emperor
seems on this occasion to have foreseen and prevented the latent
claims of the clergy. The royal youth was commanded to take the
crown from the altar, and with his own hands to place it on his
head, as a gift which he held from God, his father, and the
nation. The same ceremony was repeated, though with less energy,
in the subsequent associations of Lothaire and Lewis the Second:
the Carlovingian sceptre was transmitted from father to son in a
lineal descent of four generations; and the ambition of the popes
was reduced to the empty honor of crowning and anointing these
hereditary princes, who were already invested with their power
and dominions. The pious Lewis survived his brothers, and
embraced the whole empire of Charlemagne; but the nations and the
nobles, his bishops and his children, quickly discerned that this
mighty mass was no longer inspired by the same soul; and the
foundations were undermined to the centre, while the external
surface was yet fair and entire. After a war, or battle, which
consumed one hundred thousand Franks, the empire was divided by
treaty between his three sons, who had violated every filial and
fraternal duty. The kingdoms of Germany and France were forever
separated; the provinces of Gaul, between the Rhone and the Alps,
the Meuse and the Rhine, were assigned, with Italy, to the
Imperial dignity of Lothaire. In the partition of his share,
Lorraine and Arles, two recent and transitory kingdoms, were
bestowed on the younger children; and Lewis the Second, his
eldest son, was content with the realm of Italy, the proper and
sufficient patrimony of a Roman emperor. On his death without any
male issue, the vacant throne was disputed by his uncles and
cousins, and the popes most dexterously seized the occasion of
judging the claims and merits of the candidates, and of bestowing
on the most obsequious, or most liberal, the Imperial office of
advocate of the Roman church. The dregs of the Carlovingian race
no longer exhibited any symptoms of virtue or power, and the
ridiculous epithets of the bard, the
stammerer, the
fat, and the
simple, distinguished the tame and
uniform features of a crowd of kings alike deserving of oblivion.
By the failure of the collateral branches, the whole inheritance
devolved to Charles the Fat, the last emperor of his family: his
insanity authorized the desertion of Germany, Italy, and France:
he was deposed in a diet, and solicited his daily bread from the
rebels by whose contempt his life and liberty had been spared.
According to the measure of their force, the governors, the
bishops, and the lords, usurped the fragments of the falling
empire; and some preference was shown to the female or
illegitimate blood of Charlemagne. Of the greater part, the title
and possession were alike doubtful, and the merit was adequate to
the contracted scale of their dominions. Those who could appear
with an army at the gates of Rome were crowned emperors in the
Vatican; but their modesty was more frequently satisfied with the
appellation of kings of Italy: and the whole term of seventy-four
years may be deemed a vacancy, from the abdication of Charles the
Fat to the establishment of Otho the First.
Otho was of the noble race of the dukes of Saxony; and if he
truly descended from Witikind, the adversary and proselyte of
Charlemagne, the posterity of a vanquished people was exalted to
reign over their conquerors. His father, Henry the Fowler, was
elected, by the suffrage of the nation, to save and institute the
kingdom of Germany. Its limits were enlarged on every side by his
son, the first and greatest of the Othos. A portion of Gaul, to
the west of the Rhine, along the banks of the Meuse and the
Moselle, was assigned to the Germans, by whose blood and language
it has been tinged since the time of Cæsar and Tacitus.
Between the Rhine, the Rhone, and the Alps, the successors of
Otho acquired a vain supremacy over the broken kingdoms of
Burgundy and Arles. In the North, Christianity was propagated by
the sword of Otho, the conqueror and apostle of the Slavic
nations of the Elbe and Oder: the marches of Brandenburgh and
Sleswick were fortified with German colonies; and the king of
Denmark, the dukes of Poland and Bohemia, confessed themselves
his tributary vassals. At the head of a victorious army, he
passed the Alps, subdued the kingdom of Italy, delivered the
pope, and forever fixed the Imperial crown in the name and nation
of Germany. From that memorable æra, two maxims of public
jurisprudence were introduced by force and ratified by time. I.
That the prince, who was elected in the
German diet, acquired, from that instant, the subject kingdoms of
Italy and Rome. II. But that he might not legally assume the
titles of emperor and Augustus, till he had received the crown
from the hands of the Roman pontiff.
The Imperial dignity of Charlemagne was announced to the East
by the alteration of his style; and instead of saluting his
fathers, the Greek emperors, he presumed to adopt the more equal
and familiar appellation of brother. Perhaps in his connection
with Irene he aspired to the name of husband: his embassy to
Constantinople spoke the language of peace and friendship, and
might conceal a treaty of marriage with that ambitious princess,
who had renounced the most sacred duties of a mother. The nature,
the duration, the probable consequences of such a union between
two distant and dissonant empires, it is impossible to
conjecture; but the unanimous silence of the Latins may teach us
to suspect, that the report was invented by the enemies of Irene,
to charge her with the guilt of betraying the church and state to
the strangers of the West. The French ambassadors were the
spectators, and had nearly been the victims, of the conspiracy of
Nicephorus, and the national hatred. Constantinople was
exasperated by the treason and sacrilege of ancient Rome: a
proverb, "That the Franks were good friends and bad neighbors,"
was in every one's mouth; but it was dangerous to provoke a
neighbor who might be tempted to reiterate, in the church of St.
Sophia, the ceremony of his Imperial coronation. After a tedious
journey of circuit and delay, the ambassadors of Nicephorus found
him in his camp, on the banks of the River Sala; and Charlemagne
affected to confound their vanity by displaying, in a Franconian
village, the pomp, or at least the pride, of the Byzantine
palace. The Greeks were successively led through four halls of
audience: in the first they were ready to fall prostrate before a
splendid personage in a chair of state, till he informed them
that he was only a servant, the constable, or master of the
horse, of the emperor. The same mistake, and the same answer,
were repeated in the apartments of the count palatine, the
steward, and the chamberlain; and their impatience was gradually
heightened, till the doors of the presence-chamber were thrown
open, and they beheld the genuine monarch, on his throne,
enriched with the foreign luxury which he despised, and encircled
with the love and reverence of his victorious chiefs. A treaty of
peace and alliance was concluded between the two empires, and the
limits of the East and West were defined by the right of present
possession. But the Greeks soon forgot this humiliating equality,
or remembered it only to hate the Barbarians by whom it was
extorted. During the short union of virtue and power, they
respectfully saluted the august
Charlemagne, with the acclamations of
basileus, and emperor of the Romans. As
soon as these qualities were separated in the person of his pious
son, the Byzantine letters were inscribed, "To the king, or, as
he styles himself, the emperor of the Franks and Lombards." When
both power and virtue were extinct, they despoiled Lewis the
Second of his hereditary title, and with the barbarous
appellation of rex or rega, degraded
him among the crowd of Latin princes. His reply is expressive of
his weakness: he proves, with some learning, that, both in sacred
and profane history, the name of king is synonymous with the
Greek word basileus: if, at
Constantinople, it were assumed in a more exclusive and imperial
sense, he claims from his ancestors, and from the popes, a just
participation of the honors of the Roman purple. The same
controversy was revived in the reign of the Othos; and their
ambassador describes, in lively colors, the insolence of the
Byzantine court. The Greeks affected to despise the poverty and
ignorance of the Franks and Saxons; and in their last decline
refused to prostitute to the kings of Germany the title of Roman
emperors.
These emperors, in the election of the popes, continued to
exercise the powers which had been assumed by the Gothic and
Grecian princes; and the importance of this prerogative increased
with the temporal estate and spiritual jurisdiction of the Roman
church. In the Christian aristocracy, the principal members of
the clergy still formed a senate to assist the administration,
and to supply the vacancy, of the bishop. Rome was divided into
twenty-eight parishes, and each parish was governed by a cardinal
priest, or presbyter, a title which, however common or modest in
its origin, has aspired to emulate the purple of kings. Their
number was enlarged by the association of the seven deacons of
the most considerable hospitals, the seven palatine judges of the
Lateran, and some dignitaries of the church. This ecclesiastical
senate was directed by the seven cardinal-bishops of the Roman
province, who were less occupied in the suburb dioceses of Ostia,
Porto, Velitræ, Tusculum, Præneste, Tibur, and the
Sabines, than by their weekly service in the Lateran, and their
superior share in the honors and authority of the apostolic see.
On the death of the pope, these bishops recommended a successor
to the suffrage of the college of cardinals, and their choice was
ratified or rejected by the applause or clamor of the Roman
people. But the election was imperfect; nor could the pontiff be
legally consecrated till the emperor, the advocate of the church,
had graciously signified his approbation and consent. The royal
commissioner examined, on the spot, the form and freedom of the
proceedings; nor was it till after a previous scrutiny into the
qualifications of the candidates, that he accepted an oath of
fidelity, and confirmed the donations which had successively
enriched the patrimony of St. Peter. In the frequent schisms, the
rival claims were submitted to the sentence of the emperor; and
in a synod of bishops he presumed to judge, to condemn, and to
punish, the crimes of a guilty pontiff. Otho the First imposed a
treaty on the senate and people, who engaged to prefer the
candidate most acceptable to his majesty: his successors
anticipated or prevented their choice: they bestowed the Roman
benefice, like the bishoprics of Cologne or Bamberg, on their
chancellors or preceptors; and whatever might be the merit of a
Frank or Saxon, his name sufficiently attests the interposition
of foreign power. These acts of prerogative were most speciously
excused by the vices of a popular election. The competitor who
had been excluded by the cardinals appealed to the passions or
avarice of the multitude; the Vatican and the Lateran were
stained with blood; and the most powerful senators, the marquises
of Tuscany and the counts of Tusculum, held the apostolic see in
a long and disgraceful servitude. The Roman pontiffs, of the
ninth and tenth centuries, were insulted, imprisoned, and
murdered, by their tyrants; and such was their indigence, after
the loss and usurpation of the ecclesiastical patrimonies, that
they could neither support the state of a prince, nor exercise
the charity of a priest. The influence of two sister prostitutes,
Marozia and Theodora, was founded on their wealth and beauty,
their political and amorous intrigues: the most strenuous of
their lovers were rewarded with the Roman mitre, and their reign
may have suggested to the darker ages the fable of a female pope.
The bastard son, the grandson, and the great-grandson of Marozia,
a rare genealogy, were seated in the chair of St. Peter, and it
was at the age of nineteen years that the second of these became
the head of the Latin church. * His youth and manhood were of a
suitable complexion; and the nations of pilgrims could bear
testimony to the charges that were urged against him in a Roman
synod, and in the presence of Otho the Great. As John XII. had
renounced the dress and decencies of his profession, the
soldier may not perhaps be dishonored
by the wine which he drank, the blood that he spilt, the flames
that he kindled, or the licentious pursuits of gaming and
hunting. His open simony might be the consequence of distress;
and his blasphemous invocation of Jupiter and Venus, if it be
true, could not possibly be serious. But we read, with some
surprise, that the worthy grandson of Marozia lived in public
adultery with the matrons of Rome; that the Lateran palace was
turned into a school for prostitution, and that his rapes of
virgins and widows had deterred the female pilgrims from visiting
the tomb of St. Peter, lest, in the devout act, they should be
violated by his successor. The Protestants have dwelt with
malicious pleasure on these characters of Antichrist; but to a
philosophic eye, the vices of the clergy are far less dangerous
than their virtues. After a long series of scandal, the apostolic
see was reformed and exalted by the austerity and zeal of Gregory
VII. That ambitious monk devoted his life to the execution of two
projects. I. To fix in the college of cardinals the freedom and
independence of election, and forever to abolish the right or
usurpation of the emperors and the Roman people. II. To bestow
and resume the Western empire as a fief or benefice of the
church, and to extend his temporal dominion over the kings and
kingdoms of the earth. After a contest of fifty years, the first
of these designs was accomplished by the firm support of the
ecclesiastical order, whose liberty was connected with that of
their chief. But the second attempt, though it was crowned with
some partial and apparent success, has been vigorously resisted
by the secular power, and finally extinguished by the improvement
of human reason.
In the revival of the empire of empire of Rome, neither the
bishop nor the people could bestow on Charlemagne or Otho the
provinces which were lost, as they had been won, by the chance of
arms. But the Romans were free to choose a master for themselves;
and the powers which had been delegated to the patrician, were
irrevocably granted to the French and Saxon emperors of the West.
The broken records of the times preserve some remembrance of
their palace, their mint, their tribunal, their edicts, and the
sword of justice, which, as late as the thirteenth century, was
derived from Cæsar to the præfect of the city.
Between the arts of the popes and the violence of the people,
this supremacy was crushed and annihilated. Content with the
titles of emperor and Augustus, the successors of Charlemagne
neglected to assert this local jurisdiction. In the hour of
prosperity, their ambition was diverted by more alluring objects;
and in the decay and division of the empire, they were oppressed
by the defence of their hereditary provinces. Amidst the ruins of
Italy, the famous Marozia invited one of the usurpers to assume
the character of her third husband; and Hugh, king of Burgundy
was introduced by her faction into the mole of Hadrian or Castle
of St. Angelo, which commands the principal bridge and entrance
of Rome. Her son by the first marriage, Alberic, was compelled to
attend at the nuptial banquet; but his reluctant and ungraceful
service was chastised with a blow by his new father. The blow was
productive of a revolution. "Romans," exclaimed the youth, "once
you were the masters of the world, and these Burgundians the most
abject of your slaves. They now reign, these voracious and brutal
savages, and my injury is the commencement of your servitude."
The alarum bell rang to arms in every quarter of the city: the
Burgundians retreated with haste and shame; Marozia was
imprisoned by her victorious son, and his brother, Pope John XI.,
was reduced to the exercise of his spiritual functions. With the
title of prince, Alberic possessed above twenty years the
government of Rome; and he is said to have gratified the popular
prejudice, by restoring the office, or at least the title, of
consuls and tribunes. His son and heir Octavian assumed, with the
pontificate, the name of John XII.: like his predecessor, he was
provoked by the Lombard princes to seek a deliverer for the
church and republic; and the services of Otho were rewarded with
the Imperial dignity. But the Saxon was imperious, the Romans
were impatient, the festival of the coronation was disturbed by
the secret conflict of prerogative and freedom, and Otho
commanded his sword-bearer not to stir from his person, lest he
should be assaulted and murdered at the foot of the altar. Before
he repassed the Alps, the emperor chastised the revolt of the
people and the ingratitude of John XII. The pope was degraded in
a synod; the præfect was mounted on an ass, whipped through
the city, and cast into a dungeon; thirteen of the most guilty
were hanged, others were mutilated or banished; and this severe
process was justified by the ancient laws of Theodosius and
Justinian. The voice of fame has accused the second Otho of a
perfidious and bloody act, the massacre of the senators, whom he
had invited to his table under the fair semblance of hospitality
and friendship. In the minority of his son Otho the Third, Rome
made a bold attempt to shake off the Saxon yoke, and the consul
Crescentius was the Brutus of the republic. From the condition of
a subject and an exile, he twice rose to the command of the city,
oppressed, expelled, and created the popes, and formed a
conspiracy for restoring the authority of the Greek emperors. *
In the fortress of St. Angelo, he maintained an obstinate siege,
till the unfortunate consul was betrayed by a promise of safety:
his body was suspended on a gibbet, and his head was exposed on
the battlements of the castle. By a reverse of fortune, Otho,
after separating his troops, was besieged three days, without
food, in his palace; and a disgraceful escape saved him from the
justice or fury of the Romans. The senator Ptolemy was the leader
of the people, and the widow of Crescentius enjoyed the pleasure
or the fame of revenging her husband, by a poison which she
administered to her Imperial lover. It was the design of Otho the
Third to abandon the ruder countries of the North, to erect his
throne in Italy, and to revive the institutions of the Roman
monarchy. But his successors only once in their lives appeared on
the banks of the Tyber, to receive their crown in the Vatican.
Their absence was contemptible, their presence odious and
formidable. They descended from the Alps, at the head of their
barbarians, who were strangers and enemies to the country; and
their transient visit was a scene of tumult and bloodshed. A
faint remembrance of their ancestors still tormented the Romans;
and they beheld with pious indignation the succession of Saxons,
Franks, Swabians, and Bohemians, who usurped the purple and
prerogatives of the Cæsars.
Chapter XLIX: Conquest Of Italy By The Franks. --
Part VI.
There is nothing perhaps more adverse to nature and reason than to hold in obedience remote countries and foreign nations, in opposition to their inclination and interest. A torrent of Barbarians may pass over the earth, but an extensive empire must be supported by a refined system of policy and oppression; in the centre, an absolute power, prompt in action and rich in resources; a swift and easy communication with the extreme parts; fortifications to check the first effort of rebellion; a regular administration to protect and punish; and a well-disciplined army to inspire fear, without provoking discontent and despair. Far different was the situation of the German Cæsars, who were ambitious to enslave the kingdom of Italy. Their patrimonial estates were stretched along the Rhine, or scattered in the provinces; but this ample domain was alienated by the imprudence or distress of successive princes; and their revenue, from minute and vexatious prerogative, was scarcely sufficient for the maintenance of their household. Their troops were formed by the legal or voluntary service of their feudal vassals, who passed the Alps with reluctance, assumed the license of rapine and disorder, and capriciously deserted before the end of the campaign. Whole armies were swept away by the pestilential influence of the climate: the survivors brought back the bones of their princes and nobles, and the effects of their own intemperance were often imputed to the treachery and malice of the Italians, who