Part I.
The Greek Emperors Of
Nice And Constantinople. Elevation
And Reign Of Michael
Palæologus. His False Union With The
Pope And The Latin Church. Hostile
Designs Of Charles Of
Anjou. Revolt
Of Sicily. War Of The Catalans In Asia And
Greece. Revolutions
And Present State Of Athens.
The loss of Constantinople restored
a momentary vigor to the Greeks. From their palaces,
the princes and nobles were driven into the field;
and the fragments of the falling monarchy were grasped
by the hands of the most vigorous or the most skilful
candidates. In the long and barren pages of the
Byzantine annals, it would not be an easy task
to equal the two characters of Theodore Lascaris and
John Ducas Vataces, who replanted and upheld the
Roman standard at Nice in Bithynia. The difference
of their virtues was happily suited to the diversity
of their situation. In his first efforts, the
fugitive Lascaris commanded only three cities and
two thousand soldiers: his reign was the season
of generous and active despair: in every military
operation he staked his life and crown; and his enemies
of the Hellespont and the Mæander, were surprised
by his celerity and subdued by his boldness. A
victorious reign of eighteen years expanded the principality
of Nice to the magnitude of an empire. The throne
of his successor and son-in-law Vataces was founded
on a more solid basis, a larger scope, and more plentiful
resources; and it was the temper, as well as the interest,
of Vataces to calculate the risk, to expect the moment,
and to insure the success, of his ambitious designs.
In the decline of the Latins, I have briefly exposed
the progress of the Greeks; the prudent and gradual
advances of a conqueror, who, in a reign of thirty-three
years, rescued the provinces from national and foreign
usurpers, till he pressed on all sides the Imperial
city, a leafless and sapless trunk, which must full
at the first stroke of the axe. But his interior
and peaceful administration is still more deserving
of notice and praise. The calamities of the times
had wasted the numbers and the substance of the Greeks;
the motives and the means of agriculture were extirpated;
and the most fertile lands were left without cultivation
or inhabitants. A portion of this vacant property
was occupied and improved by the command, and for
the benefit, of the emperor: a powerful hand and
a vigilant eye supplied and surpassed, by a skilful
management, the minute diligence of a private farmer:
the royal domain became the garden and granary of
Asia; and without impoverishing the people, the sovereign
acquired a fund of innocent and productive wealth.
According to the nature of the soil, his lands were
sown with corn or planted with vines; the pastures
were filled with horses and oxen, with sheep and hogs;
and when Vataces presented to the empress a crown
of diamonds and pearls, he informed her, with a smile,
that this precious ornament arose from the sale of
the eggs of his innumerable poultry. The produce
of his domain was applied to the maintenance of his
palace and hospitals, the calls of dignity and benevolence:
the lesson was still more useful than the revenue:
the plough was restored to its ancient security and
honor; and the nobles were taught to seek a sure and
independent revenue from their estates, instead of
adorning their splendid beggary by the oppression of
the people, or (what is almost the same) by the favors
of the court. The superfluous stock of corn and
cattle was eagerly purchased by the Turks, with whom
Vataces preserved a strict and sincere alliance; but
he discouraged the importation of foreign manufactures,
the costly silks of the East, and the curious labors
of the Italian looms. “The demands of nature
and necessity,” was he accustomed to say, “are
indispensable; but the influence of fashion may rise
and sink at the breath of a monarch;” and both
his precept and example recommended simplicity of manners
and the use of domestic industry. The education
of youth and the revival of learning were the most
serious objects of his care; and, without deciding
the precedency, he pronounced with truth, that a prince
and a philosopher are the two most eminent characters
of human society. His first wife was Irene, the
daughter of Theodore Lascaris, a woman more illustrious
by her personal merit, the milder virtues of her sex,
than by the blood of the Angeli and Comneni that flowed
in her veins, and transmitted the inheritance of the
empire. After her death he was contracted to
Anne, or Constance, a natural daughter of the emperor
Frederic the Second; but as the bride had not
attained the years of puberty, Vataces placed in his
solitary bed an Italian damsel of her train; and his
amorous weakness bestowed on the concubine the honors,
though not the title, of a lawful empress. His
frailty was censured as a flagitious and damnable
sin by the monks; and their rude invectives
exercised and displayed the patience of the royal lover.
A philosophic age may excuse a single vice, which
was redeemed by a crowd of virtues; and in the review
of his faults, and the more intemperate passions of
Lascaris, the judgment of their contemporaries was
softened by gratitude to the second founders of the
empire. The slaves of the Latins, without law
or peace, applauded the happiness of their brethren
who had resumed their national freedom; and Vataces
employed the laudable policy of convincing the Greeks
of every dominion that it was their interest to be
enrolled in the number of his subjects.
A strong shade of degeneracy is visible
between John Vataces and his son Theodore; between
the founder who sustained the weight, and the heir
who enjoyed the splendor, of the Imperial crown.
Yet the character of Theodore was not devoid of energy;
he had been educated in the school of his father,
in the exercise of war and hunting; Constantinople
was yet spared; but in the three years of a short
reign, he thrice led his armies into the heart of
Bulgaria. His virtues were sullied by a choleric
and suspicious temper: the first of these may
be ascribed to the ignorance of control; and the second
might naturally arise from a dark and imperfect view
of the corruption of mankind. On a march in Bulgaria,
he consulted on a question of policy his principal
ministers; and the Greek logothete, George Acropolita,
presumed to offend him by the declaration of a free
and honest opinion. The emperor half unsheathed
his cimeter; but his more deliberate rage reserved
Acropolita for a baser punishment. One of the
first officers of the empire was ordered to dismount,
stripped of his robes, and extended on the ground
in the presence of the prince and army. In this
posture he was chastised with so many and such heavy
blows from the clubs of two guards or executioners,
that when Theodore commanded them to cease, the great
logothete was scarcely able to rise and crawl away
to his tent. After a seclusion of some days,
he was recalled by a peremptory mandate to his seat
in council; and so dead were the Greeks to the sense
of honor and shame, that it is from the narrative
of the sufferer himself that we acquire the knowledge
of his disgrace. The cruelty of the emperor was
exasperated by the pangs of sickness, the approach
of a premature end, and the suspicion of poison and
magic. The lives and fortunes, the eyes and limbs,
of his kinsmen and nobles, were sacrificed to each
sally of passion; and before he died, the son of Vataces
might deserve from the people, or at least from the
court, the appellation of tyrant. A matron of
the family of the Palæologi had provoked his anger
by refusing to bestow her beauteous daughter on the
vile plebeian who was recommended by his caprice.
Without regard to her birth or age, her body, as high
as the neck, was enclosed in a sack with several cats,
who were pricked with pins to irritate their fury
against their unfortunate fellow-captive. In
his last hours the emperor testified a wish to forgive
and be forgiven, a just anxiety for the fate of John
his son and successor, who, at the age of eight years,
was condemned to the dangers of a long minority.
His last choice intrusted the office of guardian to
the sanctity of the patriarch Arsenius, and to the
courage of George Muzalon, the great domestic, who
was equally distinguished by the royal favor and the
public hatred. Since their connection with the
Latins, the names and privileges of hereditary rank
had insinuated themselves into the Greek monarchy;
and the noble families were provoked by the elevation
of a worthless favorite, to whose influence they imputed
the errors and calamities of the late reign.
In the first council, after the emperor’s death,
Muzalon, from a lofty throne, pronounced a labored
apology of his conduct and intentions: his modesty
was subdued by a unanimous assurance of esteem and
fidelity; and his most inveterate enemies were the
loudest to salute him as the guardian and savior of
the Romans. Eight days were sufficient to prepare
the execution of the conspiracy. On the ninth,
the obsequies of the deceased monarch were solemnized
in the cathedral of Magnesia, an Asiatic city,
where he expired, on the banks of the Hermus, and
at the foot of Mount Sipylus. The holy rites
were interrupted by a sedition of the guards; Muzalon,
his brothers, and his adherents, were massacred at
the foot of the altar; and the absent patriarch was
associated with a new colleague, with Michael Palæologus,
the most illustrious, in birth and merit, of the Greek
nobles.
Of those who are proud of their ancestors,
the far greater part must be content with local or
domestic renown; and few there are who dare trust
the memorials of their family to the public annals
of their country. As early as the middle of the
eleventh century, the noble race of the Palæologi
stands high and conspicuous in the Byzantine history:
it was the valiant George Palæologus who placed the
father of the Comneni on the throne; and his kinsmen
or descendants continue, in each generation, to lead
the armies and councils of the state. The purple
was not dishonored by their alliance, and had the law
of succession, and female succession, been strictly
observed, the wife of Theodore Lascaris must have
yielded to her elder sister, the mother of Michael
Palæologus, who afterwards raised his family to the
throne. In his person, the splendor of birth
was dignified by the merit of the soldier and statesman:
in his early youth he was promoted to the office of
constable or commander of the French mercenaries;
the private expense of a day never exceeded three
pieces of gold; but his ambition was rapacious and
profuse; and his gifts were doubled by the graces of
his conversation and manners. The love of the
soldiers and people excited the jealousy of the court,
and Michael thrice escaped from the dangers in which
he was involved by his own imprudence or that of his
friends. I. Under the reign of Justice and Vataces,
a dispute arose between two officers, one of
whom accused the other of maintaining the hereditary
right of the Palæologi The cause was decided, according
to the new jurisprudence of the Latins, by single
combat; the defendant was overthrown; but he persisted
in declaring that himself alone was guilty; and that
he had uttered these rash or treasonable speeches without
the approbation or knowledge of his patron Yet a cloud
of suspicion hung over the innocence of the constable;
he was still pursued by the whispers of malevolence;
and a subtle courtier, the archbishop of Philadelphia,
urged him to accept the judgment of God in the fiery
proof of the ordeal. Three days before the trial,
the patient’s arm was enclosed in a bag, and
secured by the royal signet; and it was incumbent
on him to bear a red-hot ball of iron three times from
the altar to the rails of the sanctuary, without artifice
and without injury. Palæologus eluded the dangerous
experiment with sense and pleasantry. “I
am a soldier,” said he, “and will boldly
enter the lists with my accusers; but a layman, a
sinner like myself, is not endowed with the gift of
miracles. Your piety, most holy prelate, may
deserve the interposition of Heaven, and from your
hands I will receive the fiery globe, the pledge of
my innocence.” The archbishop started; the
emperor smiled; and the absolution or pardon of Michael
was approved by new rewards and new services.
II. In the succeeding reign, as he held the government
of Nice, he was secretly informed, that the mind of
the absent prince was poisoned with jealousy; and
that death, or blindness, would be his final reward.
Instead of awaiting the return and sentence of Theodore,
the constable, with some followers, escaped from the
city and the empire; and though he was plundered by
the Turkmans of the desert, he found a hospitable
refuge in the court of the sultan. In the ambiguous
state of an exile, Michael reconciled the duties of
gratitude and loyalty: drawing his sword against
the Tartars; admonishing the garrisons of the Roman
limit; and promoting, by his influence, the restoration
of peace, in which his pardon and recall were honorably
included. III. While he guarded the West
against the despot of Epirus, Michael was again suspected
and condemned in the palace; and such was his loyalty
or weakness, that he submitted to be led in chains
above six hundred miles from Durazzo to Nice.
The civility of the messenger alleviated his disgrace;
the emperor’s sickness dispelled his danger;
and the last breath of Theodore, which recommended
his infant son, at once acknowledged the innocence
and the power of Palæologus.
But his innocence had been too unworthily
treated, and his power was too strongly felt, to curb
an aspiring subject in the fair field that was opened
to his ambition. In the council, after the death
of Theodore, he was the first to pronounce, and the
first to violate, the oath of allegiance to Muzalon;
and so dexterous was his conduct, that he reaped the
benefit, without incurring the guilt, or at least the
reproach, of the subsequent massacre. In the
choice of a regent, he balanced the interests and
passions of the candidates; turned their envy and hatred
from himself against each other, and forced every competitor
to own, that after his own claims, those of Palæologus
were best entitled to the preference. Under the
title of great duke, he accepted or assumed, during
a long minority, the active powers of government; the
patriarch was a venerable name; and the factious nobles
were seduced, or oppressed, by the ascendant of his
genius. The fruits of the economy of Vataces
were deposited in a strong castle on the banks of the
Hermus, in the custody of the faithful Varangians:
the constable retained his command or influence over
the foreign troops; he employed the guards to possess
the treasure, and the treasure to corrupt the guards;
and whatsoever might be the abuse of the public money,
his character was above the suspicion of private avarice.
By himself, or by his emissaries, he strove to persuade
every rank of subjects, that their own prosperity
would rise in just proportion to the establishment
of his authority. The weight of taxes was suspended,
the perpetual theme of popular complaint; and he prohibited
the trials by the ordeal and judicial combat.
These Barbaric institutions were already abolished
or undermined in France and England; and
the appeal to the sword offended the sense of a civilized,
and the temper of an unwarlike, people.
For the future maintenance of their wives and children,
the veterans were grateful: the priests and the
philosophers applauded his ardent zeal for the advancement
of religion and learning; and his vague promise of
rewarding merit was applied by every candidate to his
own hopes. Conscious of the influence of the
clergy, Michael successfully labored to secure the
suffrage of that powerful order. Their expensive
journey from Nice to Magnesia, afforded a decent and
ample pretence: the leading prelates were tempted
by the liberality of his nocturnal visits; and the
incorruptible patriarch was flattered by the homage
of his new colleague, who led his mule by the bridle
into the town, and removed to a respectful distance
the importunity of the crowd. Without renouncing
his title by royal descent, Palæologus encouraged
a free discussion into the advantages of elective
monarchy; and his adherents asked, with the insolence
of triumph, what patient would trust his health, or
what merchant would abandon his vessel, to the hereditary
skill of a physician or a pilot? The youth of
the emperor, and the impending dangers of a minority,
required the support of a mature and experienced guardian;
of an associate raised above the envy of his equals,
and invested with the name and prerogatives of royalty.
For the interest of the prince and people, without
any selfish views for himself or his family, the great
duke consented to guard and instruct the son of Theodore;
but he sighed for the happy moment when he might restore
to his firmer hands the administration of his patrimony,
and enjoy the blessings of a private station.
He was first invested with the title and prerogatives
of despot, which bestowed the purple ornaments
and the second place in the Roman monarchy. It
was afterwards agreed that John and Michael should
be proclaimed as joint emperors, and raised on the
buckler, but that the preeminence should be reserved
for the birthright of the former. A mutual league
of amity was pledged between the royal partners; and
in case of a rupture, the subjects were bound, by their
oath of allegiance, to declare themselves against the
aggressor; an ambiguous name, the seed of discord
and civil war. Palæologus was content; but,
on the day of the coronation, and in the cathedral
of Nice, his zealous adherents most vehemently urged
the just priority of his age and merit. The unseasonable
dispute was eluded by postponing to a more convenient
opportunity the coronation of John Lascaris; and he
walked with a slight diadem in the train of his guardian,
who alone received the Imperial crown from the hands
of the patriarch. It was not without extreme
reluctance that Arsenius abandoned the cause of his
pupil; out the Varangians brandished their battle-axes;
a sign of assent was extorted from the trembling youth;
and some voices were heard, that the life of a child
should no longer impede the settlement of the nation.
A full harvest of honors and employments was distributed
among his friends by the grateful Palæologus.
In his own family he created a despot and two sebastocrators;
Alexius Strategopulus was decorated with the title
of Cæsar; and that veteran commander soon repaid the
obligation, by restoring Constantinople to the Greek
emperor.
It was in the second year of his reign,
while he resided in the palace and gardens of Nymphæum,
near Smyrna, that the first messenger arrived
at the dead of night; and the stupendous intelligence
was imparted to Michael, after he had been gently
waked by the tender precaution of his sister Eulogia.
The man was unknown or obscure; he produced no letters
from the victorious Cæsar; nor could it easily be
credited, after the defeat of Vataces and the recent
failure of Palæologus himself, that the capital had
been surprised by a detachment of eight hundred soldiers.
As a hostage, the doubtful author was confined, with
the assurance of death or an ample recompense; and
the court was left some hours in the anxiety of hope
and fear, till the messengers of Alexius arrived with
the authentic intelligence, and displayed the trophies
of the conquest, the sword and sceptre, the buskins
and bonnet, of the usurper Baldwin, which he had
dropped in his precipitate flight. A general
assembly of the bishops, senators, and nobles, was
immediately convened, and never perhaps was an event
received with more heartfelt and universal joy.
In a studied oration, the new sovereign of Constantinople
congratulated his own and the public fortune.
“There was a time,” said he, “a far
distant time, when the Roman empire extended to the
Adriatic, the Tigris, and the confines of Ãthiopia.
After the loss of the provinces, our capital itself,
in these last and calamitous days, has been wrested
from our hands by the Barbarians of the West.
From the lowest ebb, the tide of prosperity has again
returned in our favor; but our prosperity was that
of fugitives and exiles: and when we were asked,
which was the country of the Romans, we indicated
with a blush the climate of the globe, and the quarter
of the heavens. The divine Providence has now
restored to our arms the city of Constantine, the
sacred seat of religion and empire; and it will depend
on our valor and conduct to render this important acquisition
the pledge and omen of future victories.”
So eager was the impatience of the prince and people,
that Michael made his triumphal entry into Constantinople
only twenty days after the expulsion of the Latins.
The golden gate was thrown open at his approach; the
devout conqueror dismounted from his horse; and a
miraculous image of Mary the Conductress was borne
before him, that the divine Virgin in person might
appear to conduct him to the temple of her Son, the
cathedral of St. Sophia. But after the first
transport of devotion and pride, he sighed at the
dreary prospect of solitude and ruin. The palace
was defiled with smoke and dirt, and the gross intemperance
of the Franks; whole streets had been consumed by
fire, or were decayed by the injuries of time; the
sacred and profane edifices were stripped of their
ornaments: and, as if they were conscious of
their approaching exile, the industry of the Latins
had been confined to the work of pillage and destruction.
Trade had expired under the pressure of anarchy and
distress, and the numbers of inhabitants had decreased
with the opulence of the city. It was the first
care of the Greek monarch to reinstate the nobles in
the palaces of their fathers; and the houses or the
ground which they occupied were restored to the families
that could exhibit a legal right of inheritance.
But the far greater part was extinct or lost; the vacant
property had devolved to the lord; he repeopled Constantinople
by a liberal invitation to the provinces; and the
brave volunteers were seated in the capital
which had been recovered by their arms. The French
barons and the principal families had retired with
their emperor; but the patient and humble crowd of
Latins was attached to the country, and indifferent
to the change of masters. Instead of banishing
the factories of the Pisans, Venetians, and Genoese,
the prudent conqueror accepted their oaths of allegiance,
encouraged their industry, confirmed their privileges,
and allowed them to live under the jurisdiction of
their proper magistrates. Of these nations, the
Pisans and Venetians preserved their respective quarters
in the city; but the services and power of the Genoese
deserved at the same time the gratitude and the jealousy
of the Greeks. Their independent colony was first
planted at the seaport town of Heraclea in Thrace.
They were speedily recalled, and settled in the exclusive
possession of the suburb of Galata, an advantageous
post, in which they revived the commerce, and insulted
the majesty, of the Byzantine empire.
The recovery of Constantinople was
celebrated as the æra of a new empire:
the conqueror, alone, and by the right of the sword,
renewed his coronation in the church of St. Sophia;
and the name and honors of John Lascaris, his pupil
and lawful sovereign, were insensibly abolished.
But his claims still lived in the minds of the people;
and the royal youth must speedily attain the years
of manhood and ambition. By fear or conscience,
Palæologus was restrained from dipping his hands in
innocent and royal blood; but the anxiety of a usurper
and a parent urged him to secure his throne by one
of those imperfect crimes so familiar to the modern
Greeks. The loss of sight incapacitated the young
prince for the active business of the world; instead
of the brutal violence of tearing out his eyes, the
visual nerve was destroyed by the intense glare of
a red-hot basin, and John Lascaris was removed
to a distant castle, where he spent many years in
privacy and oblivion. Such cool and deliberate
guilt may seem incompatible with remorse; but if Michael
could trust the mercy of Heaven, he was not inaccessible
to the reproaches and vengeance of mankind, which
he had provoked by cruelty and treason. His cruelty
imposed on a servile court the duties of applause
or silence; but the clergy had a right to speak in
the name of their invisible Master; and their holy
legions were led by a prelate, whose character was
above the temptations of hope or fear. After a
short abdication of his dignity, Arsenius had
consented to ascend the ecclesiastical throne of Constantinople,
and to preside in the restoration of the church.
His pious simplicity was long deceived by the arts
of Palæologus; and his patience and submission might
soothe the usurper, and protect the safety of the
young prince. On the news of his inhuman treatment,
the patriarch unsheathed the spiritual sword; and
superstition, on this occasion, was enlisted in the
cause of humanity and justice. In a synod of
bishops, who were stimulated by the example of his
zeal, the patriarch pronounced a sentence of excommunication;
though his prudence still repeated the name of Michael
in the public prayers. The Eastern prelates had
not adopted the dangerous maxims of ancient Rome;
nor did they presume to enforce their censures, by
deposing princes, or absolving nations from their oaths
of allegiance. But the Christian, who had been
separated from God and the church, became an object
of horror; and, in a turbulent and fanatic capital,
that horror might arm the hand of an assassin, or inflame
a sedition of the people. Palæologus felt his
danger, confessed his guilt, and deprecated his judge:
the act was irretrievable; the prize was obtained;
and the most rigorous penance, which he solicited,
would have raised the sinner to the reputation of
a saint. The unrelenting patriarch refused to
announce any means of atonement or any hopes of mercy;
and condescended only to pronounce, that for so great
a crime, great indeed must be the satisfaction.
“Do you require,” said Michael, “that
I should abdicate the empire?” and at these
words, he offered, or seemed to offer, the sword of
state. Arsenius eagerly grasped this pledge of
sovereignty; but when he perceived that the emperor
was unwilling to purchase absolution at so dear a
rate, he indignantly escaped to his cell, and left
the royal sinner kneeling and weeping before the door.
Part II.
The danger and scandal of this excommunication
subsisted above three years, till the popular clamor
was assuaged by time and repentance; till the brethren
of Arsenius condemned his inflexible spirit, so repugnant
to the unbounded forgiveness of the gospel. The
emperor had artfully insinuated, that, if he were
still rejected at home, he might seek, in the Roman
pontiff, a more indulgent judge; but it was far more
easy and effectual to find or to place that judge
at the head of the Byzantine church. Arsenius
was involved in a vague rumor of conspiracy and disaffection;
some irregular steps in his ordination and government
were liable to censure; a synod deposed him from the
episcopal office; and he was transported under a guard
of soldiers to a small island of the Propontis.
Before his exile, he sullenly requested that a strict
account might be taken of the treasures of the church;
boasted, that his sole riches, three pieces of gold,
had been earned by transcribing the psalms; continued
to assert the freedom of his mind; and denied, with
his last breath, the pardon which was implored by the
royal sinner. After some delay, Gregory, [259
bishop of Adrianople, was translated to the Byzantine
throne; but his authority was found insufficient to
support the absolution of the emperor; and Joseph,
a reverend monk, was substituted to that important
function. This edifying scene was represented
in the presence of the senate and the people; at the
end of six years the humble penitent was restored
to the communion of the faithful; and humanity will
rejoice, that a milder treatment of the captive Lascaris
was stipulated as a proof of his remorse. But
the spirit of Arsenius still survived in a powerful
faction of the monks and clergy, who persevered about
forty-eight years in an obstinate schism. Their
scruples were treated with tenderness and respect by
Michael and his son; and the reconciliation of the
Arsénites was the serious labor of the church
and state. In the confidence of fanaticism, they
had proposed to try their cause by a miracle; and
when the two papers, that contained their own and
the adverse cause, were cast into a fiery brazier,
they expected that the Catholic verity would be respected
by the flames. Alas! the two papers were indiscriminately
consumed, and this unforeseen accident produced the
union of a day, and renewed the quarrel of an age.
The final treaty displayed the victory of the
Arsénites: the clergy abstained during forty
days from all ecclesiastical functions; a slight penance
was imposed on the laity; the body of Arsenius was
deposited in the sanctuary; and, in the name of the
departed saint, the prince and people were released
from the sins of their fathers.
The establishment of his family was
the motive, or at least the pretence, of the crime
of Palæologus; and he was impatient to confirm the
succession, by sharing with his eldest son the honors
of the purple. Andronicus, afterwards surnamed
the Elder, was proclaimed and crowned emperor of the
Romans, in the fifteenth year of his age; and, from
the first æra of a prolix and inglorious reign,
he held that august title nine years as the colleague,
and fifty as the successor, of his father. Michael
himself, had he died in a private station, would have
been thought more worthy of the empire; and the assaults
of his temporal and spiritual enemies left him few
moments to labor for his own fame or the happiness
of his subjects. He wrested from the Franks several
of the noblest islands of the Archipelago, Lesbos,
Chios, and Rhodes: his brother Constantine was
sent to command in Malvasia and Sparta; and the eastern
side of the Morea, from Argos and Napoli to Cape Thinners,
was repossessed by the Greeks. This effusion
of Christian blood was loudly condemned by the patriarch;
and the insolent priest presumed to interpose his
fears and scruples between the arms of princes.
But in the prosecution of these western conquests,
the countries beyond the Hellespont were left naked
to the Turks; and their depredations verified the
prophecy of a dying senator, that the recovery of Constantinople
would be the ruin of Asia. The victories of Michael
were achieved by his lieutenants; his sword rusted
in the palace; and, in the transactions of the emperor
with the popes and the king of Naples, his political
acts were stained with cruelty and fraud.
I. The Vatican was the most natural
refuge of a Latin emperor, who had been driven from
his throne; and Pope Urban the Fourth appeared to pity
the misfortunes, and vindicate the cause, of the fugitive
Baldwin. A crusade, with plenary indulgence,
was preached by his command against the schismatic
Greeks: he excommunicated their allies and adherents;
solicited Louis the Ninth in favor of his kinsman;
and demanded a tenth of the ecclesiastical revenues
of France and England for the service of the holy
war. The subtle Greek, who watched the rising
tempest of the West, attempted to suspend or soothe
the hostility of the pope, by suppliant embassies
and respectful letters; but he insinuated that the
establishment of peace must prepare the reconciliation
and obedience of the Eastern church. The Roman
court could not be deceived by so gross an artifice;
and Michael was admonished, that the repentance of
the son should precede the forgiveness of the father;
and that faith (an ambiguous word) was the
only basis of friendship and alliance. After a
long and affected delay, the approach of danger, and
the importunity of Gregory the Tenth, compelled him
to enter on a more serious negotiation: he alleged
the example of the great Vataces; and the Greek clergy,
who understood the intentions of their prince, were
not alarmed by the first steps of reconciliation and
respect. But when he pressed the conclusion of
the treaty, they strenuously declared, that the Latins,
though not in name, were heretics in fact, and that
they despised those strangers as the vilest and most
despicable portion of the human race. It was
the task of the emperor to persuade, to corrupt, to
intimidate the most popular ecclesiastics, to gain
the vote of each individual, and alternately to urge
the arguments of Christian charity and the public
welfare. The texts of the fathers and the arms
of the Franks were balanced in the theological and
political scale; and without approving the addition
to the Nicene creed, the most moderate were taught
to confess, that the two hostile propositions of proceeding
from the Father by the Son, and of proceeding from
the Father and the Son, might be reduced to a safe
and Catholic sense. The supremacy of the pope
was a doctrine more easy to conceive, but more painful
to acknowledge: yet Michael represented to his
monks and prelates, that they might submit to name
the Roman bishop as the first of the patriarchs; and
that their distance and discretion would guard the
liberties of the Eastern church from the mischievous
consequences of the right of appeal. He protested
that he would sacrifice his life and empire rather
than yield the smallest point of orthodox faith or
national independence; and this declaration was sealed
and ratified by a golden bull. The patriarch
Joseph withdrew to a monastery, to resign or resume
his throne, according to the event of the treaty:
the letters of union and obedience were subscribed
by the emperor, his son Andronicus, and thirty-five
archbishops and metropolitans, with their respective
synods; and the episcopal list was multiplied by many
diocèses which were annihilated under the yoke
of the infidels. An embassy was composed of some
trusty ministers and prelates: they embarked
for Italy, with rich ornaments and rare perfumes for
the altar of St. Peter; and their secret orders authorized
and recommended a boundless compliance. They were
received in the general council of Lyons, by Pope
Gregory the Tenth, at the head of five hundred bishops.
He embraced with tears his long-lost and repentant
children; accepted the oath of the ambassadors, who
abjured the schism in the name of the two emperors;
adorned the prelates with the ring and mitre; chanted
in Greek and Latin the Nicene creed with the addition
of filioque; and rejoiced in the union of the
East and West, which had been reserved for his reign.
To consummate this pious work, the Byzantine deputies
were speedily followed by the pope’s nuncios;
and their instruction discloses the policy of the
Vatican, which could not be satisfied with the vain
title of supremacy. After viewing the temper
of the prince and people, they were enjoined to absolve
the schismatic clergy, who should subscribe and swear
their abjuration and obedience; to establish in all
the churches the use of the perfect creed; to prepare
the entrance of a cardinal legate, with the full powers
and dignity of his office; and to instruct the emperor
in the advantages which he might derive from the temporal
protection of the Roman pontiff.
But they found a country without a
friend, a nation in which the names of Rome and Union
were pronounced with abhorrence. The patriarch
Joseph was indeed removed: his place was filled
by Veccus, an ecclesiastic of learning and moderation;
and the emperor was still urged by the same motives,
to persevere in the same professions. But in his
private language Palæologus affected to deplore the
pride, and to blame the innovations, of the Latins;
and while he debased his character by this double
hypocrisy, he justified and punished the opposition
of his subjects. By the joint suffrage of the
new and the ancient Rome, a sentence of excommunication
was pronounced against the obstinate schismatics;
the censures of the church were executed by the sword
of Michael; on the failure of persuasion, he tried
the arguments of prison and exile, of whipping and
mutilation; those touchstones, says an historian,
of cowards and the brave. Two Greeks still reigned
in Ãtolia, Epirus, and Thessaly, with the appellation
of despots: they had yielded to the sovereign
of Constantinople, but they rejected the chains of
the Roman pontiff, and supported their refusal by
successful arms. Under their protection, the
fugitive monks and bishops assembled in hostile synods;
and retorted the name of heretic with the galling addition
of apostate: the prince of Trebizond was tempted
to assume the forfeit title of emperor; and
even the Latins of Negropont, Thebes, Athens, and
the Morea, forgot the merits of the convert, to join,
with open or clandestine aid, the enemies of Palæologus.
His favorite generals, of his own blood, and family,
successively deserted, or betrayed, the sacrilegious
trust. His sister Eulogia, a niece, and two female
cousins, conspired against him; another niece, Mary
queen of Bulgaria, negotiated his ruin with the sultan
of Egypt; and, in the public eye, their treason was
consecrated as the most sublime virtue. To the
pope’s nuncios, who urged the consummation
of the work, Palæologus exposed a naked recital of
all that he had done and suffered for their sake.
They were assured that the guilty sectaries, of both
sexes and every rank, had been deprived of their honors,
their fortunes, and their liberty; a spreading list
of confiscation and punishment, which involved many
persons, the dearest to the emperor, or the best deserving
of his favor. They were conducted to the prison,
to behold four princes of the royal blood chained
in the four corners, and shaking their fetters in an
agony of grief and rage. Two of these captives
were afterwards released; the one by submission, the
other by death: but the obstinacy of their two
companions was chastised by the loss of their eyes;
and the Greeks, the least adverse to the union, deplored
that cruel and inauspicious tragedy. Persecutors
must expect the hatred of those whom they oppress;
but they commonly find some consolation in the testimony
of their conscience, the applause of their party,
and, perhaps, the success of their undertaking.
But the hypocrisy of Michael, which was prompted only
by political motives, must have forced him to hate
himself, to despise his followers, and to esteem and
envy the rebel champions by whom he was detested and
despised. While his violence was abhorred at
Constantinople, at Rome his slowness was arraigned,
and his sincerity suspected; till at length Pope Martin
the Fourth excluded the Greek emperor from the pale
of a church, into which he was striving to reduce
a schismatic people. No sooner had the tyrant
expired, than the union was dissolved, and abjured
by unanimous consent; the churches were purified;
the penitents were reconciled; and his son Andronicus,
after weeping the sins and errors of his youth most
piously denied his father the burial of a prince and
a Christian.
II. In the distress of the Latins,
the walls and towers of Constantinople had fallen
to decay: they were restored and fortified by
the policy of Michael, who deposited a plenteous store
of corn and salt provisions, to sustain the siege
which he might hourly expect from the resentment of
the Western powers. Of these, the sovereign of
the Two Sicilies was the most formidable neighbor:
but as long as they were possessed by Mainfroy, the
bastard of Frederic the Second, his monarchy was the
bulwark, rather than the annoyance, of the Eastern
empire. The usurper, though a brave and active
prince, was sufficiently employed in the defence of
his throne: his proscription by successive popes
had separated Mainfroy from the common cause of the
Latins; and the forces that might have besieged Constantinople
were detained in a crusade against the domestic enemy
of Rome. The prize of her avenger, the crown
of the Two Sicilies, was won and worn by the brother
of St Louis, by Charles count of Anjou and Provence,
who led the chivalry of France on this holy expedition.
The disaffection of his Christian subjects compelled
Mainfroy to enlist a colony of Saracens whom his father
had planted in Apulia; and this odious succor will
explain the defiance of the Catholic hero, who rejected
all terms of accommodation. “Bear this
message,” said Charles, “to the sultan
of Nocera, that God and the sword are umpire between
us; and that he shall either send me to paradise,
or I will send him to the pit of hell.”
The armies met: and though I am ignorant of Mainfroy’s
doom in the other world, in this he lost his friends,
his kingdom, and his life, in the bloody battle of
Benevento. Naples and Sicily were immediately
peopled with a warlike race of French nobles; and
their aspiring leader embraced the future conquest
of Africa, Greece, and Palestine. The most specious
reasons might point his first arms against the Byzantine
empire; and Palæologus, diffident of his own strength,
repeatedly appealed from the ambition of Charles to
the humanity of St. Louis, who still preserved a just
ascendant over the mind of his ferocious brother.
For a while the attention of that brother was confined
at home by the invasion of Conradin, the last heir
to the imperial house of Swabia; but the hapless boy
sunk in the unequal conflict; and his execution on
a public scaffold taught the rivals of Charles to
tremble for their heads as well as their dominions.
A second respite was obtained by the last crusade
of St. Louis to the African coast; and the double
motive of interest and duty urged the king of Naples
to assist, with his powers and his presence, the holy
enterprise. The death of St. Louis released him
from the importunity of a virtuous censor: the
king of Tunis confessed himself the tributary and vassal
of the crown of Sicily; and the boldest of the French
knights were free to enlist under his banner against
the Greek empire. A treaty and a marriage united
his interest with the house of Courtenay; his daughter
Beatrice was promised to Philip, son and heir of the
emperor Baldwin; a pension of six hundred ounces of
gold was allowed for his maintenance; and his generous
father distributed among his aliens the kingdoms and
provinces of the East, reserving only Constantinople,
and one day’s journey round the city for the
imperial domain. In this perilous moment, Palæologus
was the most eager to subscribe the creed, and implore
the protection, of the Roman pontiff, who assumed,
with propriety and weight, the character of an angel
of peace, the common father of the Christians.
By his voice, the sword of Charles was chained in
the scabbard; and the Greek ambassadors beheld him,
in the pope’s antechamber, biting his ivory
sceptre in a transport of fury, and deeply resenting
the refusal to enfranchise and consecrate his arms.
He appears to have respected the disinterested mediation
of Gregory the Tenth; but Charles was insensibly disgusted
by the pride and partiality of Nicholas the Third;
and his attachment to his kindred, the Ursini family,
alienated the most strenuous champion from the service
of the church. The hostile league against the
Greeks, of Philip the Latin emperor, the king of the
Two Sicilies, and the republic of Venice, was ripened
into execution; and the election of Martin the Fourth,
a French pope, gave a sanction to the cause.
Of the allies, Philip supplied his name; Martin, a
bull of excommunication; the Venetians, a squadron
of forty galleys; and the formidable powers of Charles
consisted of forty counts, ten thousand men at arms,
a numerous body of infantry, and a fleet of more than
three hundred ships and transports. A distant
day was appointed for assembling this mighty force
in the harbor of Brindisi; and a previous attempt
was risked with a detachment of three hundred knights,
who invaded Albania, and besieged the fortress of
Belgrade. Their defeat might amuse with a triumph
the vanity of Constantinople; but the more sagacious
Michael, despairing of his arms, depended on the effects
of a conspiracy; on the secret workings of a rat,
who gnawed the bowstring of the Sicilian tyrant.
Among the proscribed adherents of
the house of Swabia, John of Procida forfeited a small
island of that name in the Bay of Naples. His
birth was noble, but his education was learned; and
in the poverty of exile, he was relieved by the practice
of physic, which he had studied in the school of Salerno.
Fortune had left him nothing to lose, except life;
and to despise life is the first qualification of a
rebel. Procida was endowed with the art of negotiation,
to enforce his reasons and disguise his motives; and
in his various transactions with nations and men, he
could persuade each party that he labored solely for
their interest. The new kingdoms of Charles
were afflicted by every species of fiscal and military
oppression; and the lives and fortunes of his
Italian subjects were sacrificed to the greatness
of their master and the licentiousness of his followers.
The hatred of Naples was repressed by his presence;
but the looser government of his vicegerents excited
the contempt, as well as the aversion, of the Sicilians:
the island was roused to a sense of freedom by the
eloquence of Procida; and he displayed to every baron
his private interest in the common cause. In
the confidence of foreign aid, he successively visited
the courts of the Greek emperor, and of Peter king
of Arragon, who possessed the maritime countries
of Valentia and Catalonia. To the ambitious Peter
a crown was presented, which he might justly claim
by his marriage with the sister of Mainfroy,
and by the dying voice of Conradin, who from the scaffold
had cast a ring to his heir and avenger. Palæologus
was easily persuaded to divert his enemy from a foreign
war by a rebellion at home; and a Greek subsidy of
twenty-five thousand ounces of gold was most profitably
applied to arm a Catalan fleet, which sailed under
a holy banner to the specious attack of the Saracens
of Africa. In the disguise of a monk or beggar,
the indefatigable missionary of revolt flew from Constantinople
to Rome, and from Sicily to Saragossa: the treaty
was sealed with the signet of Pope Nicholas himself,
the enemy of Charles; and his deed of gift transferred
the fiefs of St. Peter from the house of Anjou
to that of Arragon. So widely diffused and so
freely circulated, the secret was preserved above
two years with impenetrable discretion; and each of
the conspirators imbibed the maxim of Peter, who declared
that he would cut off his left hand if it were conscious
of the intentions of his right. The mine was
prepared with deep and dangerous artifice; but it
may be questioned, whether the instant explosion of
Palermo were the effect of accident or design.
On the vigil of Easter, a procession
of the disarmed citizens visited a church without
the walls; and a noble damsel was rudely insulted by
a French soldier. The ravisher was instantly
punished with death; and if the people was at first
scattered by a military force, their numbers and fury
prevailed: the conspirators seized the opportunity;
the flame spread over the island; and eight thousand
French were exterminated in a promiscuous massacre,
which has obtained the name of the Sicilian Vespers.
From every city the banners of freedom and the
church were displayed: the revolt was inspired
by the presence or the soul of Procida and Peter of
Arragon, who sailed from the African coast to Palermo,
was saluted as the king and savior of the isle.
By the rebellion of a people on whom he had so long
trampled with impunity, Charles was astonished and
confounded; and in the first agony of grief and devotion,
he was heard to exclaim, “O God! if thou hast
decreed to humble me, grant me at least a gentle and
gradual descent from the pinnacle of greatness!”
His fleet and army, which already filled the seaports
of Italy, were hastily recalled from the service of
the Grecian war; and the situation of Messina exposed
that town to the first storm of his revenge.
Feeble in themselves, and yet hopeless of foreign
succor, the citizens would have repented, and submitted
on the assurance of full pardon and their ancient
privileges. But the pride of the monarch was
already rekindled; and the most fervent entreaties
of the legate could extort no more than a promise,
that he would forgive the remainder, after a chosen
list of eight hundred rebels had been yielded to his
discretion. The despair of the Messinese renewed
their courage: Peter of Arragon approached to
their relief; and his rival was driven back by
the failure of provision and the terrors of the equinox
to the Calabrian shore. At the same moment, the
Catalan admiral, the famous Roger de Loria, swept
the channel with an invincible squadron: the
French fleet, more numerous in transports than in galleys,
was either burnt or destroyed; and the same blow assured
the independence of Sicily and the safety of the Greek
empire. A few days before his death, the emperor
Michael rejoiced in the fall of an enemy whom he hated
and esteemed; and perhaps he might be content with
the popular judgment, that had they not been matched
with each other, Constantinople and Italy must speedily
have obeyed the same master. From this disastrous
moment, the life of Charles was a series of misfortunes:
his capital was insulted, his son was made prisoner,
and he sunk into the grave without recovering the
Isle of Sicily, which, after a war of twenty years,
was finally severed from the throne of Naples, and
transferred, as an independent kingdom, to a younger
branch of the house of Arragon.
Part III.
I shall not, I trust, be accused of
superstition; but I must remark that, even in this
world, the natural order of events will sometimes
afford the strong appearances of moral retribution.
The first Palæologus had saved his empire by involving
the kingdoms of the West in rebellion and blood; and
from these scenes of discord uprose a generation of
iron men, who assaulted and endangered the empire
of his son. In modern times our debts and taxes
are the secret poison which still corrodes the bosom
of peace: but in the weak and disorderly government
of the middle ages, it was agitated by the present
evil of the disbanded armies. Too idle to work,
too proud to beg, the mercenaries were accustomed to
a life of rapine: they could rob with more dignity
and effect under a banner and a chief; and the sovereign,
to whom their service was useless, and their presence
importunate, endeavored to discharge the torrent on
some neighboring countries. After the peace of
Sicily, many thousands of Genoese, Catalans,
&c., who had fought, by sea and land, under the
standard of Anjou or Arragon, were blended into one
nation by the resemblance of their manners and interest.
They heard that the Greek provinces of Asia were invaded
by the Turks: they resolved to share the harvest
of pay and plunder: and Frederic king of Sicily
most liberally contributed the means of their departure.
In a warfare of twenty years, a ship, or a camp, was
become their country; arms were their sole profession
and property; valor was the only virtue which they
knew; their women had imbibed the fearless temper
of their lovers and husbands: it was reported,
that, with a stroke of their broadsword, the Catalans
could cleave a horseman and a horse; and the report
itself was a powerful weapon. Roger de Flor
was the most popular of their chiefs; and his personal
merit overshadowed the dignity of his prouder rivals
of Arragon. The offspring of a marriage between
a German gentleman of the court of Frederic the Second
and a damsel of Brindisi, Roger was successively a
templar, an apostate, a pirate, and at length
the richest and most powerful admiral of the Mediterranean.
He sailed from Messina to Constantinople, with eighteen
galleys, four great ships, and eight thousand adventurers;
and his previous treaty was faithfully accomplished
by Andronicus the elder, who accepted with joy and
terror this formidable succor. A palace was allotted
for his reception, and a niece of the emperor was
given in marriage to the valiant stranger, who was
immediately created great duke or admiral of Romania.
After a decent repose, he transported his troops over
the Propontis, and boldly led them against the Turks:
in two bloody battles thirty thousand of the Moslems
were slain: he raised the siege of Philadelphia,
and deserved the name of the deliverer of Asia.
But after a short season of prosperity, the cloud
of slavery and ruin again burst on that unhappy province.
The inhabitants escaped (says a Greek historian) from
the smoke into the flames; and the hostility of the
Turks was less pernicious than the friendship of the
Catalans. The lives and fortunes which they
had rescued they considered as their own: the
willing or reluctant maid was saved from the race of
circumcision for the embraces of a Christian soldier:
the exaction of fines and supplies was enforced by
licentious rapine and arbitrary executions; and, on
the resistance of Magnesia, the great duke besieged
a city of the Roman empire. These disorders he
excused by the wrongs and passions of a victorious
army; nor would his own authority or person have been
safe, had he dared to punish his faithful followers,
who were defrauded of the just and covenanted price
of their services. The threats and complaints
of Andronicus disclosed the nakedness of the empire.
His golden bull had invited no more than five hundred
horse and a thousand foot soldiers; yet the crowds
of volunteers, who migrated to the East, had been
enlisted and fed by his spontaneous bounty. While
his bravest allies were content with three byzants
or pieces of gold, for their monthly pay, an ounce,
or even two ounces, of gold were assigned to the Catalans,
whose annual pension would thus amount to near a hundred
pounds sterling: one of their chiefs had modestly
rated at three hundred thousand crowns the value of
his future merits; and above a million had
been issued from the treasury for the maintenance of
these costly mercenaries. A cruel tax had been
imposed on the corn of the husbandman: one third
was retrenched from the salaries of the public officers;
and the standard of the coin was so shamefully debased,
that of the four-and-twenty parts only five were of
pure gold. At the summons of the emperor, Roger
evacuated a province which no longer supplied the
materials of rapine; but he refused to disperse
his troops; and while his style was respectful, his
conduct was independent and hostile. He protested,
that if the emperor should march against him, he would
advance forty paces to kiss the ground before him;
but in rising from this prostrate attitude Roger had
a life and sword at the service of his friends.
The great duke of Romania condescended to accept the
title and ornaments of Cæsar; but he rejected the
new proposal of the government of Asia with a subsidy
of corn and money, on condition that he should
reduce his troops to the harmless number of three
thousand men. Assassination is the last resource
of cowards. The Cæsar was tempted to visit the
royal residence of Adrianople; in the apartment, and
before the eyes, of the empress he was stabbed by the
Alani guards; and though the deed was imputed to their
private revenge, his countrymen, who dwelt at
Constantinople in the security of peace, were involved
in the same proscription by the prince or people.
The loss of their leader intimidated the crowd of
adventurers, who hoisted the sails of flight, and
were soon scattered round the coasts of the Mediterranean.
But a veteran band of fifteen hundred Catalans, or
French, stood firm in the strong fortress of Gallipoli
on the Hellespont, displayed the banners of Arragon,
and offered to revenge and justify their chief, by
an equal combat of ten or a hundred warriors.
Instead of accepting this bold defiance, the emperor
Michael, the son and colleague of Andronicus, resolved
to oppress them with the weight of multitudes:
every nerve was strained to form an army of thirteen
thousand horse and thirty thousand foot; and the Propontis
was covered with the ships of the Greeks and Genoese.
In two battles by sea and land, these mighty forces
were encountered and overthrown by the despair and
discipline of the Catalans: the young emperor
fled to the palace; and an insufficient guard of light-horse
was left for the protection of the open country.
Victory renewed the hopes and numbers of the adventures:
every nation was blended under the name and standard
of the great company; and three thousand Turkish
prosélytes deserted from the Imperial service
to join this military association. In the possession
of Gallipoli, the Catalans intercepted the trade
of Constantinople and the Black Sea, while they spread
their devastation on either side of the Hellespont
over the confines of Europe and Asia. To prevent
their approach, the greatest part of the Byzantine
territory was laid waste by the Greeks themselves:
the peasants and their cattle retired into the city;
and myriads of sheep and oxen, for which neither place
nor food could be procured, were unprofitably slaughtered
on the same day. Four times the emperor Andronicus
sued for peace, and four times he was inflexibly repulsed,
till the want of provisions, and the discord of the
chiefs, compelled the Catalans to evacuate the banks
of the Hellespont and the neighborhood of the capital.
After their separation from the Turks, the remains
of the great company pursued their march through Macedonia
and Thessaly, to seek a new establishment in the heart
of Greece.
After some ages of oblivion, Greece
was awakened to new misfortunes by the arms of the
Latins. In the two hundred and fifty years between
the first and the last conquest of Constantinople,
that venerable land was disputed by a multitude of
petty tyrants; without the comforts of freedom and
genius, her ancient cities were again plunged in foreign
and intestine war; and, if servitude be preferable
to anarchy, they might repose with joy under the Turkish
yoke. I shall not pursue the obscure and various
dynasties, that rose and fell on the continent or in
the isles; but our silence on the fate of Athens
would argue a strange ingratitude to the first and
purest school of liberal science and amusement.
In the partition of the empire, the principality of
Athens and Thebes was assigned to Otho de la Roche,
a noble warrior of Burgundy, with the title of
great duke, which the Latins understood in their
own sense, and the Greeks more foolishly derived from
the age of Constantine. Otho followed the standard
of the marquis of Montferrat: the ample state
which he acquired by a miracle of conduct or fortune,
was peaceably inherited by his son and two grandsons,
till the family, though not the nation, was changed,
by the marriage of an heiress into the elder branch
of the house of Brienne. The son of that marriage,
Walter de Brienne, succeeded to the duchy of Athens;
and, with the aid of some Catalan mercenaries, whom
he invested with fiefs, reduced above thirty
castles of the vassal or neighboring lords. But
when he was informed of the approach and ambition of
the great company, he collected a force of seven hundred
knights, six thousand four hundred horse, and eight
thousand foot, and boldly met them on the banks of
the River Cephisus in Botia. The Catalans amounted
to no more than three thousand five hundred horse,
and four thousand foot; but the deficiency of numbers
was compensated by stratagem and order. They
formed round their camp an artificial inundation; the
duke and his knights advanced without fear or precaution
on the verdant meadow; their horses plunged into the
bog; and he was cut in pieces, with the greatest part
of the French cavalry. His family and nation were
expelled; and his son Walter de Brienne, the titular
duke of Athens, the tyrant of Florence, and the constable
of France, lost his life in the field of Poitiers
Attica and Botia were the rewards of the victorious
Catalans; they married the widows and daughters of
the slain; and during fourteen years, the great company
was the terror of the Grecian states. Their factions
drove them to acknowledge the sovereignty of the house
of Arragon; and during the remainder of the fourteenth
century, Athens, as a government or an appanage, was
successively bestowed by the kings of Sicily.
After the French and Catalans, the third dynasty was
that of the Accaioli, a family, plebeian at Florence,
potent at Naples, and sovereign in Greece. Athens,
which they embellished with new buildings, became
the capital of a state, that extended over Thebes,
Argos, Corinth, Delphi, and a part of Thessaly; and
their reign was finally determined by Mahomet the
Second, who strangled the last duke, and educated
his sons in the discipline and religion of the seraglio.
Athens, though no more than the
shadow of her former self, still contains about eight
or ten thousand inhabitants; of these, three fourths
are Greeks in religion and language; and the Turks,
who compose the remainder, have relaxed, in their
intercourse with the citizens, somewhat of the pride
and gravity of their national character. The
olive-tree, the gift of Minerva, flourishes in Attica;
nor has the honey of Mount Hymettus lost any part
of its exquisite flavor: but the languid
trade is monopolized by strangers, and the agriculture
of a barren land is abandoned to the vagrant Walachians.
The Athenians are still distinguished by the subtlety
and acuteness of their understandings; but these qualities,
unless ennobled by freedom, and enlightened by study,
will degenerate into a low and selfish cunning:
and it is a proverbial saying of the country, “From
the Jews of Thessalonica, the Turks of Negropont,
and the Greeks of Athens, good Lord deliver us!”
This artful people has eluded the tyranny of the Turkish
bashaws, by an expedient which alleviates their servitude
and aggravates their shame. About the middle of
the last century, the Athenians chose for their protector
the Kislar Aga, or chief black eunuch of the seraglio.
This Ãthiopian slave, who possesses the sultan’s
ear, condescends to accept the tribute of thirty thousand
crowns: his lieutenant, the Waywode, whom he
annually confirms, may reserve for his own about five
or six thousand more; and such is the policy of the
citizens, that they seldom fail to remove and punish
an oppressive governor. Their private differences
are decided by the archbishop, one of the richest
prelates of the Greek church, since he possesses a
revenue of one thousand pounds sterling; and by a tribunal
of the eight geronti or elders, chosen in the
eight quarters of the city: the noble families
cannot trace their pedigree above three hundred years;
but their principal members are distinguished by a
grave demeanor, a fur cap, and the lofty appellation
of archon. By some, who delight in the
contrast, the modern language of Athens is represented
as the most corrupt and barbarous of the seventy dialects
of the vulgar Greek: this picture is too
darkly colored: but it would not be easy, in the
country of Plato and Demosthenes, to find a reader
or a copy of their works. The Athenians walk
with supine indifference among the glorious ruins
of antiquity; and such is the debasement of their character,
that they are incapable of admiring the genius of
their predecessors.