The Secret History of the Court of Justinian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 147 pages of information about The Secret History of the Court of Justinian.

The Secret History of the Court of Justinian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 147 pages of information about The Secret History of the Court of Justinian.

I must now relate how he robbed Byzantium and other cities of their ornaments.  In the first place he resolved to humiliate the lawyers.  He deprived them of all the fees, which, after they had finished their case, were considerable, and enriched them and increased their distinction.  He ordered that litigants should come to an agreement upon oath, which brought the lawyers into contempt and insignificance.  After he had seized the estates of the Senators and other families reputed wealthy, in Byzantium and throughout the Empire, the profession had little to do, for the citizens no longer possessed property worth disputing about.  Thus, of the numerous and famous orators who once composed this order there remained only a few, who were everywhere despised and lived in the greatest poverty, finding that their profession brought them nothing but insult.  He also caused physicians and professors of the liberal arts to be deprived of the necessaries of life.  He cut off from them all the supplies which former emperors had attached to these professions, and which were paid out of the State funds.  Further, he had no scruple about transferring to the public funds all the revenues which the inhabitants of the cities had devoted either to public purposes or for providing entertainments.  From that time no attention was paid to physicians or professors; no one ventured to trouble himself about the public buildings; there were no public lights in the cities, or any enjoyments for the inhabitants; the performances in the theatres and hippodromes and the combats of wild beasts, in which Theodora had been bred and brought up, were entirely discontinued.  He afterwards suppressed public exhibitions in Byzantium, to save the usual State contribution, to the ruin of an almost countless multitude who found their means of support in these entertainments.  Their life, both in public and private, became sad and dejected and utterly joyless, as if some misfortune had fallen upon them from Heaven.  Nothing was spoken of in conversation at home, in the streets, or in the churches, except misfortune and suffering.  Such was the state of the cities.

I have still something important to mention.  Every year two consuls were appointed—­one at Rome, the other at Byzantium.  Whoever was advanced to that dignity was expected to expend more than twenty centenars of gold upon the public.  This sum was to a small extent furnished by the consuls themselves, while the greater part was due to the liberality of the Emperor.  This money was distributed amongst those whom I have mentioned, above all to the most necessitous, and principally to those employed upon the stage, which materially increased the comfort of the citizens.  But, since the accession of Justinian, the elections never took place at the proper time; sometimes one consul remained in office for several years, and at last people never even dreamed of a fresh appointment.  This reduced all to the greatest distress; since the Emperor no longer granted the usual assistance to his subjects, and at the same time deprived them of what they had by every means in his power.

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The Secret History of the Court of Justinian from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.