the whole force of the empire upon his enemies in the
regions of the west, and in the course of half a dozen
years (A.D. 533-539), by the aid of his great general,
Belisarius, he destroyed the kingdom of the Vandals
in the region about Carthage and Tunis, subdued the
Moors, and brought to its last gasp the power of the
Ostrogoths in Italy. The territorial extent of
his kingdom was nearly doubled by these victories;
his resources were vastly increased; the prestige of
his arms was enormously raised; veteran armies had
been formed which despised danger, and only desired
to be led against fresh enemies; and officers had been
trained capable of conducting operations of every kind,
and confident, under all circumstances, of success.
It must have been with feelings of dissatisfaction
and alarm not easily to be dissembled that the Great
King heard of his brother’s long series of victories
and conquests, each step in which constituted a fresh
danger to Persia by aggrandizing the power whom she
had chiefly to fear. At first his annoyance found
a vent in insolent demands for a share of the Roman
spoils, which Justinian thought it prudent to humor
but, as time went on, and the tide of victory flowed
more and more strongly in one direction, he became
less and less able to contain himself, and more and
more determined to renounce his treaty with Rome and
renew the old struggle for supremacy. His own
inclination, a sufficiently strong motive in itself,
was seconded and intensified by applications made
to him from without on the part of those who had especial
reasons for dreading the advance of Rome, and for
expecting to be among her next victims. Witiges,
the Ostrogoth king of Italy, and Bassaces, an Armenian
chief, were the most important of these applicants.
Embassies from these opposite quarters reached Chosroes
in the same year, A.D. 539, and urged him for his own
security to declare war against Justinian before it
was too late. “Justinian,” the ambassadors
said, “aimed at universal empire. His aspirations
had for a while been kept in check by Persia, and
by Persia alone, the sole power in the world that
he feared. Since the ‘endless peace’
was made, he had felt himself free to give full vent
to his ambitious greed, had commenced a course of
aggression upon all the other conterminous nations,
and had spread war and confusion on all sides.
He had destroyed the kingdom of the Vandals in Africa,
conquered the Moors, deceived the Goths of Italy by
professions of friendship, and then fallen upon them
with all his forces, violated the rights of Armenia
and driven it to rebellion, enslaved the Tzani and
the Lazi, seized the Greek city of Bosporus, and the
‘Isle of Palms’ on the shores of the Red
Sea, solicited the alliance of barbarous Huns and
Ethiopians, striven to sow discord between the Persian
monarch and his vassals, and in every part of the
world shown himself equally grasping and restless.
What would be the consequence if Persia continued
to hold aloof? Simply that all the other nations