Justinian I : early career and wars
Early career
Justinian was a Latin-speaking Illyrian and was born of peasant
stock. He was born in Tauresium, Dardania (probably
south of modern Niš, Serbia).
Justinian was a Roman name that he took from his uncle, the emperor
Justin I, to whom he owed his advancement. While still a young man,
he went to Constantinople, where his uncle held high military command.
He received an excellent education, though it was said that he always
spoke Greek with a bad accent. When Justin became emperor in 518,
Justinian was a powerful influence in guiding the policy of his
elderly and childless uncle, whose favourite nephew he was. He was
legally adopted by Justin and held important offices. In 525 he
received the title of caesar and, on April 4, 527, was made co emperor
with the rank of augustus. At the same time, his wife, the former
actress Theodora, who exercised considerable influence over him,
was crowned augusta. On Justin I's death on August. 1, 527, Justinian
succeeded him as sole emperor.
Foreign policy and wars
Two important facets of Justinian's foreign policy were his continuation
of the age-old struggle with Persia and his attempt to regain the
former Roman provinces in the West from the control of barbarian
invaders.
When Justinian came to the throne, his troops were fighting on
the Euphrates River against the armies of the Persian king Kavadh
(Qobad) I. After campaigns in which the Byzantine generals, among
whom Belisarius was the most distinguished, obtained considerable
successes, a truce was made on the death of Kavadh in September
531. His successor, Khosrow I, finally came to terms, and the Treaty
of Eternal Peace was ratified in 532. The treaty was on the whole
favourable to the Byzantines, who lost no territory and whose suzerainty
over the key district of Lazica (Colchis, in Asia Minor) was recognized
by Persia. Justinian, however, had to pay the Persians a subsidy
of 11,000 pounds of gold, and in return Khosrow gave up any claim
to a subvention for the defence of the Caucasus.
War broke out again in 540, when Justinian was fully occupied in
Italy. Justinian had somewhat neglected the army in the East, and
in 540 Khosrow moved into Mesopotamia, northern Syria, and Byzantine
Armenia and systematically looted the key cities. In 541 he invaded
Lazica in the north. Belisarius, now reappointed commander in chief
in the East, launched counteroffensives in 541 and 542 before his
recall to Italy. The war dragged on under other generals and was
to some extent hindered by bubonic plague. A five-years' truce was
made in 545 and renewed in 551 but still did not extend to Lazica,
which the Persians obstinately refused to restore, and a fierce
struggle continued intermittently in this mountainous region. When
the truce was again renewed in 557, however, Lazica was included.
Finally, a 50 years' truce was negotiated, probably at the end of
561; Byzantium agreed to pay an annual tribute of 30,000 solidi
(gold coins), and the Persians renounced all claim to the small
Christian kingdom of Lazica, an important bulwark against northern
invaders. Justinian had thus maintained his eastern provinces virtually
intact in spite of the vigorous offensives of the Persian king,
so his policy on this front can hardly be described as a failure.
In the West, Justinian considered it his duty to regain provinces
lost to the empire “through indolence,” and he could not ignore
the trials of Catholics living under the rule of Arians (Christian
heretics) in Italy and in North Africa. In the Vandal kingdom of
North Africa, Catholics had been subject to frequent persecution.
There was also a disputed succession to the throne after the aged
Vandal king Hilderich, who had been in alliance with Constantinople
and had ceased persecution of the Catholics, was deposed in favour
of Gelimer in 530. At the same time, the Vandals were threatened
by the Moorish tribes of Mauretania and southern Numidia. In the
face of considerable opposition from his generals and ministers,
Justinian launched his attack on North Africa to aid Hilderich in
June 533. The fleet of about 500 vessels set out with 92 warships.
An unopposed landing was made in August, and by the following March
(534) Belisarius had mastered the kingdom and received the submission
of the Vandal ruler Gelimer. Northern Africa was reorganized as
part of the empire and now included Sardinia, Corsica, the Balearic
Islands, and Septem (Ceuta).
In Italy, the mother province of the Roman Empire in which the
older capital city (Rome) was situated, Justinian found a situation
similar to that in North Africa and particularly favourable to his
ambitions. Under his immediate predecessors, Italy had been ruled
by a barbarian, the Ostrogoth Theodoric, who, though virtually independent,
was the nominal representative of the Byzantine emperor. He was
an Arian and, though at first a tolerant and wise ruler, toward
the end of his reign had begun to persecute the Catholics. He had
no male heir, and on his death there was not only antagonism between
Arian Goths and Catholic Italians but also a rift within the ranks
of the Ostrogoths, some of whom were violently anti-Byzantine.
Thinking that this was now his opportunity to support his fellow
Catholics and to reassert direct control over the province, Justinian
dispatched an army and sent Belisarius with a fleet to attack Sicily,
while an embassy set off to gain the support of the powerful Franks
now settled in Gaul. After the defeat of the Ostrogothic king Witigis
and the capture of Ravenna in 540, imperial administration was reestablished
in Italy under the praetorian prefect Athanasius. Rigorous financial
exactions and the rapacity of the soldiers made the new regime unpopular.
Many of the Ostrogoths had never submitted, and after the two short
and unfortunate reigns of Hildebad and Eraric, they proclaimed Totila
(Baduila) as their king in the autumn of 541. Totila proved an able
leader and in 542 took the offensive in southern Italy and in 543
captured Naples. In 544 Belisarius was sent against him with inadequate
forces. City after city was captured by the Ostrogoths until only
Ravenna, Otranto, and Ancona remained in Byzantine hands. Belisarius
could make no headway without adequate reinforcements, and in 549
he was recalled to Constantinople.
Meanwhile, Totila took over the administration of the country,
though at the expense of alienating the great landowners. He hoped
to come to terms with Justinian, but in 552 a powerful army was
sent against him under the eunuch commander Narses. Totila was defeated
by superior numbers and strategy and was mortally wounded at the
battle of Busta Gallorum. Narses entered Rome and soon afterward
defeated Ostrogothic resistance at Mount Lactarius, south of Vesuvius.
Pockets of resistance, reinforced by Franks and Alemanni who had
invaded Italy in 553, lingered on until 562, when the Byzantines
were in control of the whole of the country. Justinian hoped to
restore the social and economic well-being of Italy by a series
of measures, the Pragmatic Sanction of 554. The country was so ravaged
by war that any return to normal life proved impossible during Justinian's
lifetime, and only three years after his death part of the country
was lost to the Lombard invaders.
On the northern frontier in the Balkans the Roman provinces faced
continual attacks from barbarian raiders. Thrace, Dacia, and Dalmatia
were harried by Bulgars and Slavs (known as Sclaveni). In 550–551
the invaders even wintered in Byzantine territory, despite the efforts
of the army to dislodge them. In 559 the Bulgars and Slavs were
joined by the Kotrigur Huns, who got as far south as Thermopylæ
and eastward through Thrace to the long wall protecting Constantinople.
The veteran Belisarius saved the situation by mustering the civilian
population. In 561 the Avars joined the raiders but were bought
off with a subsidy. These attacks from beyond the Danube did immense
damage, and, although fortifications and defence works were built
and strengthened in the Balkans and in Greece, the newcomers were
neither effectively repulsed nor assimilated by the Byzantines.
The Slavs, and later the Bulgars, eventually succeeded in settling
within the Roman provinces. Failure to keep them out is one of the
criticisms sometimes made against Justinian.
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