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.
these unhappy persons were forced to purchase them even at a price far above their proper value, and to convey them in many cases from a considerable distance to the place where the troops were encamped, and to distribute them to the adjutants in what quantity and at what rate the latter pleased, not at a fair and reasonable price.  This import was called “the import of victualling,” which, as it were, cut the sinews of all the landed proprietors; for they had to pay an annual tribute ten times greater than before, and were obliged not only to furnish supplies the soldiers, but on several occasions to convey corn to Byzantium.  Barsyames was not the only man who had the audacity to introduce this cursed exaction, John of Cappadocia had set the example, and the successors of Barsyames in his office followed it.  Such was the nature of the Syn[=o]n[=e], as it was called.

The “Epibol[=e]” was a kind of unforeseen ruin, which suddenly attacked the landed proprietors and utterly deprived them of the hope of subsistence; for, in the case of estates that were deserted and unproductive, the owners or tenants of which had either died or abandoned their country and hidden themselves after the misfortunes they had undergone, Justinian did not hesitate to impose a tax.  Such were these “impositions,” which were of frequent occurrence during that time.

A few words will suffice for the impost called “Diagraph[=e].”  At this time especially, the cities were afflicted with heavy losses, the causes and extent of which I will say nothing about, for it would be an endless tale.  These losses had to be repaired by the landed proprietors in proportion to the rate at which they were assessed.  Their misery, however, did not stop there, but, although pestilence had attacked the whole world, and, especially, the Roman Empire; although most of the farmers had fallen victims, and their properties had become deserted, Justinian did not show the least clemency towards the owners.  He continued to exact the yearly tribute from them, not only their own proportion, but that of their neighbours who had died of the plague.[16] Further, they were obliged to treat the soldiers with the greatest civility, and to allow them to take up their quarters in their finest and richest apartments, while they themselves all the time had to content themselves with the poorest and meanest rooms.  Such were the calamities that without intermission befell mankind during the reign of Justinian and Theodora, for there was no cessation of war or any other most terrible calamities.  Since I have mentioned the word “quarters,” I must not forget to say that at one time there were 70,000 barbarians at Constantinople, whom house owners were obliged to quarter, being thus shut out from all enjoyment of their own, and in many other ways inconvenienced.

CHAPTER XXIV

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