Justinian’s Basilica Cistern

This is an unconventional post for me, but it’s not often that Justinian appears in popular media, so I couldn’t resist posting a link to this decent piece on the grand cistern in Istanbul known as the “Basilica Cistern” due to it’s close proximity to the Hagia Sophia (the breathtaking Church of the Holy Wisdom, Justinian’s stunning cathedral rebuilt after the prior incarnation was incinerated in the Nika Riots).

Note that while the cistern was begun during the reign of Anastasius (not Justinian as the article claims) it’s completion was nonetheless Justinian’s achievement.  For anyone who has visited it in person I’m sure you would agree that pictures can’t properly convey the majesty of this place.  For anyone heading to Istanbul, please do not visit the city without descending below the streets to get a sense of Justinian’s Constantinople.

Here is a link to the Slate article:

http://www.slate.com/blogs/atlas_obscura/2015/03/09/basilica_cistern_in_istanbul.html

 

The Nika Riots, Theodora and Belisarius

Beware the Ides of January.

On this date in 532CE the Nika Riots ignited in Constantinople and almost toppled “The Last Roman”, Justinian the Great.   He was the last Roman Emperor to speak Latin as his native tongue, the man that resurrected the Western Empire (ever so briefly), the last who could count the original city of Rome amongst his dominions, and the man that codified and preserved the Roman law that underpins Western democracies.   For all these reasons and more, and with all his flaws, Justinian deserves to be remembered.

Yet he was not the “last Roman”, the moniker given to him by his own contemporaries.  The Roman state would last another thousand years.  Nor was he the only truly exceptional Roman of his age as the events of the Nika Riots, some fourteen centuries ago, remind us.

(As an aside, the Romans were always ready to name ‘the last’ of them, perhaps understandable given the remarkable durability of their line – on more than one occasion naming the ‘last’ must have seemed like a safe bet yet that honor, in my opinion, really belongs to the last Emperor of all, Constantine Palaiologos who died during the Siege of Constantinople in 1453 and who will figure prominently in the next book I will write once I finish the “Legend of Africanus” series, please stay tuned).

The Riots began as a just protest in Constantinople against an Imperial bureacracy that was riddled with corruption.  Constantine the Great had reformed the sclerotic Roman administration two hundred years before after eliminating his co-Caesars, but subsequent emperors had let it deteriorate- none had Constantine’s ability.  When the Western Empire was lost, the mandarins in Constantinople did little to adapt the kleptocratic state in the surviving East.  The average Roman was crushed under high and arbitrary taxes, private property was amassed by the select few, and the concept of citizenship itself suffered greatly.

Justinian I came to power scant years before Nika.  Aware of the corruption and rot in his inherited government, he embarked upon an ambitious program of reform, raising taxes and reducing privileges for the senatorial class.  Because he was born to a peasant family in Thrace, and despite the fact that his uncle Justin had preceded him on the throne, Justnian was never accepted by blue-blooded Rome.  Yet his humble origins also allowed Justinian to empathize with his citizens in a way that few Caesars of the latter Empire had.

In that cauldron of inequity and uncertainty, the Riots erupted.  But what had started spontaneously soon turned into something more sinister – an organized attempt by a cabal of senators and major landholders to overthrow the upstart Justinian.

The details of what happened during the Riots, that reduced much of Constantinople to ashes in one terrifying week, are contained in my book, “From Africanus” and I won’t repeat them here.  The book is a work of historical fiction but I spent years researching that stunning moment in time and tried to represent it faithfully in the book.  But as we celebrate the anniversary of that event, I would like to acknowledge the two people that saved Justinian from certain death during the Riots – Theodora, his Empress and wife, and Belisarius, one of the greatest generals that ever lived.

When his attempts to reason with the rioters failed, and the city burned, Justinian lost heart and loaded ships with treasure in Bucoleon Harbor, preparing to flee the city.  Yet when he called his final cabinet meeting to announce his decision, the Empress Theodora refused to follow him into exile! This extraordinary woman stood her ground and told all present that she preferred to die in the purple than flee in shame. Her conviction changed his mind, and Justinian remained in the palace (a move that might well have ended in both their deaths had it not been for the General).

The General, Flavius Belisarius, was an unknown when Nika exploded. A young commander, in his mid twenties, Belisarius had a single notable victory to his credit before January 532, a recent triumph against the Persians “Immortals” at a frontier fortress at Dara (in modern Syria). Since long before Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, the Romans had prohibited army officers from bringing their soldiers into the capital. Coincidentally, the young general was in Constantinople that week on leave, and outside the city walls he had left a clutch of his knights to camp and await his return. When called upon by his Emperor, Belisarius brought his men into the city and in a bold, brilliant, bloody strike he fell upon the rebels that had massed in the Hippodrome to proclaim a new emperor, and he killed them to a man.  The riots ended there.

So what?  Why does Nika matter?  Few of us have ever heard of one of the most pivotal events in the last days of the ancient world. Justinian’s survival would keep the onset of the Dark Ages at bay for another generation or two, during which time he would consolidate, and insulate enough of Rome and Greece’s intellectual legacy to help spark a Renaissance still one thousand years distant.

And for me, this is about a debt we all owe to two exceptional people that we get our first important glimpse of on this day, January 13, 532.

Theodora, whose steel kept Justinian in the Palace that day and whose brilliant mind played apart in every decision he would make until her early death.

And Belisarius, whose armored knights – the first of their kind in the history of the world (they rode like Persians, they fired bows like Huns, they organized and endured like the ancient Roman legions) ended the rebellion and would go on to win back the Western Empire.

Justinian I was a remarkable sovereign, remarkable in his achievements and in his flaws. Yet his most incredible was his ability to attract the truly exceptional to his court. Among those exceptional individuals that helped to write his story, which is ultimately the story of ROME on the verge of the dark ages, the last chapter of the ancient world, none were more exceptional than Theodora his queen and Belisarius, his general.

Tonight I drink a scotch for you both.

(A brief postscript.  This was just the beginning of Belisarius’ almost fantastical life, a life distinguished by brilliance on the battle field, honorable treatment of his foes, dedication to his wife (who did everything she could not to deserve him), and loyalty to his Emperor.  Above all, this great man was humble, his most remarkable trait.  To learn more about him, please read the sequel to “From Africanus”, “Avenging Africanus”, available on Amazon.com this Summer 2015.)

Roman Glass in Ancient Japan

Roman Glass in Japan

ROMAN GLASS has been found in a recently opened Japanese tomb dating to the 5th century, as per an article in this week’s Asahi Shimbum (courtesy of Adrian Murdoch’s fine blog).

Read the original article on this stunning discovery here: http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ201411130064

map japan

The ornamental glass (a beautiful cobalt blue plate and a delicate golden bowl seen above) is believed to have made it’s way to Japan through Sassanid Persia.  Scientific analysis suggests that both items were created by Roman artisans working within the Empire at some point in the 3rd century.  While it’s unknown precisely when and how they made their way to Japan, they were buried along with the denizen of tumulus #126, within a cluster of ancient graves dating to the late 5th century.

Niizawa Senzuka burial mounds

So what does it have to do with the Age of Justinian, this turbulent time when the light of Rome still shined in the East as darkness fell in the West?

In these fragile pieces of blue and gold glass, fantastically preserved, we have an example of how far Rome reached even in an era in which common wisdom says Rome had already “fallen”.

The truth, as found in this burial mound in Nara Prefecture suggests something very different.

While Roman trade with Japan was indeed rare, the Romans (and their trading partners and sometimes enemies, the Persians) traded actively with the East. Most of this trade centered around silk that could only be sourced from China at this time. Roman gold moved east, and Chinese silk moved West. That river of gold sustained the Persians.

But there would come a day, not long after our blue glass plate was buried in Japan, when an exceptional man, a missionary, took an extraordinary risk by smuggling silk worms out of the Forbidden City in a hollow-tipped cane. When he arrived at the Emperor Justinian’s court in Constantinople he irrevocably changed the course of history….

– Matthew J. Storm

The Conundrum – Rome Entering the Dark

Many books of fiction, academic studies, dry histories, shoddy blogs, shoddier movies and cheap soaps have been devoted to  that abstraction called ROME.

They devote themselves to the common questions we have been told that matter most, the “serious” questions.

Who were the Romans?

Where did they come from?

How did they achieve dominance over the classical world?

And most importantly in the eyes of many – what caused “THE FALL”.

The latter question is one that interested me as well, a great deal, until I understood a basic historical fact – a truly heretical historical fact.  That fact stunned me, blew me away really, fascinated me from the get-go and it hasn’t let go of me since.

ROME DID NOT FALL.

Or put more specifically, when Romulus Augustulus abdicated in favor of the Goth warlord Odoacer, he formally ended the Western Roman Empire.  Yet this apocryphal collapse was really just a historical asterisk.  Why?  How could I be so flip with the seminal event of modern western civilization.

The year was 476.  The “end” came in 476.

But the reality is that for another thousand years – until 1453 – a Roman Emperor continued to rule in the ancient Byzantium, the capital of the Roman Empire since Constantine the Great moved the capital of the Empire from Roman to the newly christened Constantinople in 330CE.

It is accurate to say that the Western Empire ceased to exist in 476, while in truth it had ceased to exist several decades before as an independent entity.  It is equally true, stunningly accurate, to assert that the Eastern Empire lived until it fell to Mehmed “the Conqueror” in 1453, on the eve of Columbus’ trip to the new world.

Assuming that what I have just abruptly foisted upon you is true, it begs the following questions.  I trust they will pique your interest as they have held me hostage since childhood,

– Why do Western school children know nothing of this “other Rome”?

– What is the missing history, these thousand years that is not taught?

– What debt do we owe to this Rome – how would our world be different if Rome hadn’t continued in the East?

– Who were these “other” Romans?  How did they perceive the falling darkness, the barbarian invasions, the retreat of classical civilization?

– How did they navigate the Dark Ages?  How did civilization survive in their hands when the West lived in darkness, ignorance, brutish squalor?

– What was the role of this forgotten Rome in the reawakening of the West in the Renaissance?

These are the basic questions that have kept me occupied for many years – they are obviously far greater than I.  But I’ve delved into these things in a very small way, pursuing my obsession and attempting to share a germ of this fascinating world with others in the form of my novel, FROM AFRICANUS, and it’s sequel, AVENGING AFRICANUS that will be released in the summer of 2014.

Please stay tuned, share your thoughts, your passion, and curiosity, for the forgotten Rome.  Not to say that the story of the Republic and early Empire isn’t worthy – it is most worthy of study and discussion but it’s not neglected.   The same can’t be said of the Rome of Justinian the Great.