Page:Bury J B The Cambridge Medieval History Vol 2 1913.djvu/295

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566]
The Saracen Claims
267

willing to yield the territory for a price, but added conditions so humiliating to the Empire that John felt himself unable to accept the proposed terms. The king's counsellors in fact sought by diplomatic delays to force Rome to take action in Suania, so that they might then object that the people themselves refused to be subject to the Empire. The plan succeeded, and John foolishly entered into correspondence with the king of Suania. By this intervention Persia had secured a subject for negotiation, and now promised that an ambassador should be sent to Constantinople to discuss the whole situation. Justin disgraced his envoy, and Zich, who, besides bearing the congratulations of Persia, was charged with proposals as to Suania, was stopped at Nisibis. Justin returned thanks for the greetings of Chosroes, but stated that as to any other matters Rome could not admit discussion. On Zich's death Mebodes was sent to Constantinople, and with him came the Saracen chiefs for whom he craved audience. Justin shewed himself so arbitrary and unapproachable that Mebodes, though abandoning his patronage of the Saracens, felt that no course was open to him save to ask for his dimissal. The question of Suania was not debated, and Ambros, the Arab chieftain, gave orders to his brother Camboses to attack Alamoundar, the head of the Saracen tribesmen who were allied to Rome. From the detailed account of these negotiations given by Menander the reader already traces in Justin's overbearing and irritable temper a loss of mental balance and a wilful self-assertion which is almost childish in its unreasoning violence.

Meanwhile the Emperor could not feel secure so long as his cousin Justin, son of the patrician Germanus, was at the head of the forces on the Danube, guarding the passes against the Avars; the general was banished to Alexandria and there assassinated. It seems probable that Justin's masterful wife was mainly responsible for the murder. About the same time Aetherius and Addaeus, senators and patricians, were accused of treason and executed (3 Oct. 566[1]).

In the West the influence of the quaestor of the palace, Anastasius (a native of Africa), would naturally direct the Emperor's attention to that province. Through the praefect Thomas, peace was concluded with the Berber tribesmen and new forts were erected to repel assaults of the barbarians. But these measures were checked[2] by the outbreak of

  1. There is some doubt as to the precise date of the murder of Justin. Johannes Biclarensis assigns it to the same year as the conspiracy of Addaeus and Aetherius (i.e. 566, in John's reckoning = Ann. II. Justini) and Evagrius clearly places it before the trial of Addaeus and Aetherius (Evagr. v. 1-3). Theophanes, it would appear wrongly, records it (p. 244, 3) under the year 570. — For the prominent position occupied by Sophia, cf. Warwick Wroth, Catalogue of the Imperial Byzantine Coins in the British Museum, London (1908), I. p. XIX.
  2. For three subsequent invasions by the Moors in which one praefect and two magistri militum were killed, see Joh. Bicl., M.G.H. Chronica Minora (ed. Mommsen), II. (1894), p. 212, and Diehl, L'Afrique byzantine, pp. 459-460.