(New Approaches To Byzantine History and Culture) David Alan Parnell (Auth.) - Justinian's Men - Careers and Relationships of Byzantine Army Officers, 518-610-Palgrave Macmillan UK (2017) PDF
(New Approaches To Byzantine History and Culture) David Alan Parnell (Auth.) - Justinian's Men - Careers and Relationships of Byzantine Army Officers, 518-610-Palgrave Macmillan UK (2017) PDF
(New Approaches To Byzantine History and Culture) David Alan Parnell (Auth.) - Justinian's Men - Careers and Relationships of Byzantine Army Officers, 518-610-Palgrave Macmillan UK (2017) PDF
Justinian’s Men
Careers and Relationships of Byzantine
Army Officers, 518-610
DAVID ALAN PARNELL
New Approaches to Byzantine History and
Culture
Series Editors
Florin Curta
University of Florida, USA
Leonora Neville
University of Wisconsin Madison, USA
Shaun Tougher
Cardiff University, UK
David Alan Parnell
Justinian’s Men
Careers and Relationships of Byzantine Army
Officers, 518–610
David Alan Parnell
Indiana University Northwest
Gary, Indiana, USA
I have accumulated many debts while writing this book. I would like first
to acknowledge my institution, Indiana University Northwest, which
has supported me with summer research funding several years in a row.
Without the dedication of the administrators and faculty to the teacher-
scholar ideal, this book would have taken much longer to write. Even still,
this book matured slowly, and the research involved led to many journal
articles and conference presentations. I would like to thank all the peo-
ple that reviewed my work and offered helpful comments along the way.
There are too many of them to name and I hope that not naming them
does not seem to decrease my gratitude. I must particularly acknowledge
the publishers of Byzantinische Zeitschrift, the Journal of Late Antiquity,
and the Journal of Medieval Military History for allowing me to reproduce
in this book portions of my articles that they so kindly printed. Finally, I
thank my wife Bethany for her support throughout this process. This book
is dedicated to her.
David Alan Parnell
v
CONTENTS
1 Introduction 1
9 Conclusion 201
Bibliography 209
Index 221
vii
LIST OF FIGURES
Fig. 1.1 Justinian and his men in a mosaic from the church of San
Vitale, Ravenna 4
Fig. 2.1 Two men, possibly guardsmen, spearing a tiger 19
Fig. 3.1 Ranks of Roman military men in the database, 518–610 AD 56
Fig. 3.2 Ranks of non-Roman military men in the database,
518–610 AD 57
Fig. 3.3 Numbers of Romans and non-Romans as generals and
commanders in the database, 518–610 AD 58
Fig. 5.1 The social networks of the Byzantine army in Italy, 538–539. 118
Fig. 6.1 The family of Justinian 134
Fig. 6.2 The family of Phocas 136
Fig. 6.3 The family of Silvanus 138
Fig. 6.4 The family of Vitalian 141
ix
LIST OF TABLE
xi
CHAPTER 1
Introduction
The Byzantine army, like most professional armies, had in theory a rigid
command hierarchy in which soldiers and officers were ranked and divided
into units. It would be a mistake, however, to assume that the army oper-
ated in practice the way it was drawn up on paper. The military hierar-
chy was conditioned and occasionally subverted by powerful social issues,
including the way officers identified themselves and others, and particu-
larly by the relationships officers formed with each other. These social
issues within the Byzantine military are especially apparent in and around
the reign of the emperor Justinian I (r. 527–565). The army was quite
busy during this period as it fought in all corners of the Mediterranean
world, from Visigothic Spain to the Persian Empire. These wars inspired
considerable commentary from contemporaries, and these observations
shed light on the army that portrays it as a vibrant and lively social com-
munity. This book considers the Byzantine army of the sixth century as a
complex web of social relationships. In this army, the identity of an officer
and the people that officer knew and counted as friends were of just as
much importance, if not more, as the officer’s official rank and position.
These officers were not simply names and ranks on a roster or protagonists
in a battle narrative, but people: Justinian’s men. Their relationships with
each other, with their subordinate soldiers, and with their emperor were
complex and subject to change. The depth of detail available on these men
and their relationships may startle some who are accustomed to Justinian’s
Pharas was energetic and thoroughly serious and upright in every way,
although he was a Herul by birth. And for a Herul not to give himself over
to treachery and drunkenness, but to strive after uprightness, is no easy mat-
ter and merits abundant praise.2
1
For a thorough discussion of the Byzantines’ Roman identity, see Chap. 3.
2
Procopius Wars 4.4.29–30.
INTRODUCTION 3
3
Procopius Wars 6.29.29–31 and see Chap. 5, ‘Populating the Social Networks in Italy,
538–539.’
4 D.A. PARNELL
Fig. 1.1 Justinian and his men in a mosaic from the church of San Vitale,
Ravenna. The emperor stands in the middle, with Belisarius to his right, Narses
to his left, and a group of imperial guardsmen on his far right. Image via
Wikimedia Commons; ©The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei.
DVD-ROM, 2002. ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA
Publishing GmbH.
in the West. In a quick war, Belisarius was able to conquer the Vandals
and bring their entire kingdom in North Africa under Byzantine control
(533–534). This success was followed by war against the Ostrogoths in
Italy, which took much longer but eventually resulted in the conquest of
the entire peninsula (535–554).
Justinian kept occupied while his generals were conquering lands in
the western Mediterranean. In Constantinople itself, he built the great
church of Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom), which was the largest cathedral
in the world at the time. Justinian also pursued religious issues, seeking to
reconcile Monophysite Christians with the Orthodox Church. In all these
projects, Justinian worked in concert with his partner and wife, Theodora,
much to the chagrin of some of the Byzantine elite. Justinian faced severe
challenges in the early 540s that represent a turning point in his reign. In
540, the Persians broke the peace and sacked Antioch, putting the empire
in the difficult position of waging war on more than one front (as the war
in Italy was still ongoing). The plague arrived in 541, killing a signifi-
cant portion of the empire’s population and therefore altering the demo-
graphic and financial basis of the government. In 541, Justinian was also
forced to sack his most important minister, the praetorian prefect John the
Cappadocian, who had been outmaneuvered by his rivals into appearing to
plot against the emperor. These disasters and changes combined to grind
military advances to a halt. By the 550s, the situation had stabilized. The
Ostrogothic war in Italy came to a close under the leadership of Narses,
and a peace was signed with the Persians that at least limited the Persian
war to certain theaters. Justinian added to his conquests a small portion of
Spain, and then spent the remainder of his reign stabilizing what he had
won and fighting defensive wars in the Balkans. By the time he died in
565, the emperor had greatly expanded the size of the Byzantine Empire
despite the debilitating effects of the plague. But the events of Justinian’s
reign had also made the enlarged empire much more difficult to control
and defend. Ruling it successfully required a prudent blend of diplomacy
and moderation in spending that few of his successors practiced.
Justinian’s reign did not exist in a vacuum, and understanding the oper-
ation of his army requires an examination of most of the sixth century,
including the period before his reign, which produced him, and the period
after, in which the full impact of his policies and wars were felt. The chron-
ological boundaries of this book are therefore set to include the prelude
to the reign of Justinian, that of his uncle Justin I (r. 518–527). Though
Justin did not rule for long, he successfully seized power from the family
6 D.A. PARNELL
of Anastasius I (r. 491–518), who had ruled before him, and bequeathed
it to Justinian. The century covered by this book also encompasses the
reigns of Justinian’s successors. Justin II (r. 565–578) and Tiberius II (r.
578–582) faced wars on multiple fronts, including Italy, Persia, and the
Balkans and spent heavily, stretching the empire’s finances perilously thin.
Maurice (r. 582–602) cleared up these wars and economized as much as
possible, to the point that he provoked the army into a mutiny that cost
him his life. His usurper, Phocas (r. 602–610), could not control the army
or government effectively and suffered disastrous losses in a war against
the Persians, to the point that Justinian’s system of administration defini-
tively disintegrated.4 His reign therefore is the bookend of this study. The
army changed dramatically in the remainder of the seventh century in the
cauldron of emergency and disaster in wars with the Persians and Arabs.5
The sources that make possible this examination also become fewer and
less detailed in the seventh century.
Fortunately, Justinian’s reign attracted considerable attention from
contemporary authors of history, the most significant of whom was
Procopius of Caesarea. Assessor (legal adviser) and private secretary to
Belisarius, Procopius accompanied the general in campaigns in the East,
Africa, and Italy in the 530s. After leaving Belisarius’ service, he authored
the History of the Wars, the Secret History, and the Buildings. While his
proximity to the important people and events of the period make him a
knowledgeable source with particular information about the relationships
of officers, it also makes it likely that his work is tinged with his own bias
and possibly with that of his patron Belisarius as well.6 In spite of this
criticism, Procopius is easily the most important source for the opera-
tion of the army in this period and should generally be trusted unless
there is particular reason to be suspicious of his motives.7 However, it
is appropriate to keep in mind the role Procopius played in shaping the
narrative of particular passages while analyzing the information he pro-
4
For narrative histories of this period, see Stein 1949 and Treadgold 1997.
5
Among many fine studies on the convulsions of the seventh century, see Haldon 2016
and Kaegi 2003.
6
See Cameron 1985, 134–8 and Kaldellis 2004, 12.
7
On Procopius as ‘the single most important source for his age,’ see Kaldellis 2004, 4. For
sympathetic views of Procopius’ trustworthiness, see Treadgold 2007, 176–226, and, espe-
cially as a military source, Lee 2004, 115. For Procopius as a teacher of combat technique,
see Whately 2015.
INTRODUCTION 7
Previous studies of the Byzantine army in this period have made use
of these sources but with different objectives in mind. There have been
many fine examinations of the formal structure of the Byzantine army
on questions including its size, organization, recruitment and degree of
loyalty.16 Historians have also shown considerable interest in the identity
of soldiers and officers within it, often questioning the degree to which
the army was ‘barbarized’ in this period.17 Most of this examination has
however focused on the bare facts—as much as they can be determined—
of identity, especially the questions of how great a percentage of the army
was of non-Roman origin, whether that percentage increased as the sixth
century wore on, and what that means. The study of social networks, or
the relationships between individuals, is still relatively new in the field of
Late Antique studies; the most prominent use of such techniques is that of
Adam M. Schor on ecclesiastical networks.18 This book is a general social
analysis of the sixth-century Byzantine army and the first work to focus on
this century in particular.19 It considers officers not merely as actors on the
battlefield or names in a story but as participants in a variety of social issues
and relationships that significantly influenced the operation of the army.
The second chapter of this book lays the foundation for the study by
describing the framework, that is the structure and functioning of the
Byzantine army, in the sixth century. The army was versatile and structurally
diverse with many different units including the field armies (comitatenses),
border armies (limitanei), federates (foederati), and guardsmen (bucella-
rii). The ranks and positions within each unit are also examined. Finally,
attention is paid to the processes, as much as is known, of recruitment and
promotion in the army. These descriptions introduce necessary vocabulary
and provide the setting for the discussion of officers in the rest of the book.
Chapter 3 introduces the question of identity in military service and
argues that the cultural and ethnic identity of soldiers and officers was gen-
erally of less importance than their behavior and service record. As many
modern historians (for example, John Teall, Michael Whitby, and Hugh
Elton) have pointed out, the Byzantine army of the sixth century, particu-
16
Special mention should be made of these particularly important pieces of scholarship:
Sarantis and Christie 2013, Elton 2007, Whitby 2007b, Rance 2005, Lee 2004, Whitby
2000b, and Treadgold 1995.
17
See Teall 1965, 296 and Greatrex 2000, 274.
18
Schor 2007 and Schor 2011.
19
Lee 2007a is an excellent introduction to the social history of war in Late Antiquity in
general.
INTRODUCTION 9
20
Teall 1965, Whitby 1995, Elton 2007.
10 D.A. PARNELL
addressed them as such, but occasionally they dealt with individual, named
soldiers. While officers likely had more meaningful relationships with other
officers, they did occasionally single out soldiers for special treatment.
This treatment could include praise in a speech, the promise of monetary
reward, or the recruiting of the soldier into the officer’s personal guards-
men (bucellarii). Far more common than these individual relationships
was a sort of formalized group relationship in which both officers and sol-
diers viewed each other as faceless collections of individuals. Each side had
expectations of the other ranging from obedience and loyalty to ensuring
the flow of pay and the distribution of booty, and means of enforcing these
expectations if they were not met.
The eighth chapter takes a step back from these relationships within
the army to consider the wider relationship between army and society as
a whole, particularly public perception of the army as an institution and
army officers individually. Evidence for these attitudes is perhaps more
plentiful than some would imagine, but it is widely scattered. Soldiers and
officers seem to have generally approved of their army service as a whole,
although they could be pushed to disobedience if normal operations
were suspended for some reason, as happened occasionally in this period.
Authors such as Procopius provide a viewpoint that could probably best
be described as that of the elites. While these elites were intensely inter-
ested in the army, their opinion often seems to have been critical of both
individual officers and the performance of the army as a whole. It is likely
that average civilians spent much less time thinking or worrying about the
army as an institution than those of higher socio-economic status. They
were, however, quick to point out the misbehavior of officers and soldiers,
which ranged from petty harassment to serious mistreatment and appall-
ing violence. Evidence drawn from the available sources suggests that the
popularity of the army varied wildly depending on whom it affected.
The book wraps up with a brief conclusion that recapitulates the social
issues that influenced the organization and functioning of the Byzantine
army in the sixth century. Although identities and various types of rela-
tionships are described in separate chapters, they of course existed side-by-
side in an officer’s life. The average Byzantine officer juggled treatment
based on perceptions of his identity, his relationship with the emperor,
other officers, his subordinate soldiers, civilians, and his family all at once.
This meant that the army was much more complex in reality than it would
have appeared on paper, all thanks to the way identities and relationships
impacted the careers of Justinian’s men.
CHAPTER 2
The Byzantine army was versatile and structurally diverse.1 It has been the
subject of several excellent studies, and it is not intended to review all of
their conclusions here.2 Instead, this chapter provides a brief overview of
the army to establish the setting for the examination of the careers and
relationships of the men who served in it. The sixth century Byzantine
army was administratively continuous with the army of the early Roman
Empire, which has been thoroughly studied.3 The Roman army evolved
steadily over centuries, with the most radical changes coming first during
the third-century crisis (235–284) and then again in the fourth century
under the Constantinian dynasty (293–363).4 While it is possible to pres-
ent a good picture of the army in the sixth century, it is more difficult
to explain exactly how it reached this form. Lack of evidence makes it
challenging to assess the development of the army in the later fourth and
fifth centuries. One of the best sources for the army of the period is itself
1
Due to the nature of the sources, it is difficult to completely detail the organization of the
army. Even when they actually discuss military structure, most of the time sources fail to
specify numbers of soldiers in a unit, ranks of soldiers and officers, or even the official name
of the unit. See Jones 1964, 1:654–5.
2
Important monographs include Southern and Dixon 1996, Treadgold 1995, and Sarantis
2016. Among edited volumes with many fine contributions, see Cameron 1995, Maas 2004,
Sabin, Van Wees, and Whitby 2007, Haldon 2007, and Sarantis and Christie 2013.
3
See, for example, Webster 1985.
4
For a summary, see Southern and Dixon 1996, 6.
BASIC DIVISIONS
The key distinction in terms of the divisions of the army of the sixth
century was that between field armies (comitatenses) and frontier armies
(limitanei). The field armies were the backbone of the army and were
primarily responsible for wars of conquest or significant defensive cam-
paigns. They were mobile armies, kept separate from the frontier forces,
and stationed in particular regions of the empire. They descended from
the units of soldiers who were companions of the soldier-emperors in the
third and early fourth centuries (comitatus). For most of the sixth century,
there were four field armies stationed in specific regions of the empire,
each commanded by a general known as a master of soldiers (magister
militum). These regional field armies were stationed in Illyricum, Thrace,
Mesopotamia, and Armenia.6 Following the conquests of Africa, Italy and
a portion of Spain, each was provided with a regional field army as well.7
Two more field armies were designated as in the emperor’s presence (prae-
5
Southern and Dixon 1996, 1.
6
The Army of the East was responsible for the entire swath of the Eastern frontier ranging
from Mesopotamia to Egypt. The Army of Armenia was a creation of Justinian, designed to
supplement the Army of the East and responsible for lands to the north of Mesopotamia. See
Jones 1964, 1:655.
7
Treadgold 1995, 15–17.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 15
15
Benjamin Isaac has expertly described the limitanei in Palestine in Isaac 1989. See also
Isaac 1992. In defense of the importance of the limitanei, see Whitby 2007a, 523.
16
As explored in Isaac 1992.
17
Belisarius brought 600 Massagetae (Huns) to Africa (Procopius Wars 3.11.11–12).
Narses had a close relationship with the Heruls, and was even able to select their own com-
mander from among them (Agathias Histories 1.11.3). On Narses and the Heruls, see also
Whitby 1995, 106. The Ghassanid Arabs under Arethas fought with Belisarius at Callinicum
(Procopius Wars 1.17.47, 1.18.7).
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 17
Romans serving under treaty. Procopius makes this clear, complaining that
although ‘formerly barbarians alone were enrolled in the federates, now
there is nothing to hinder anybody from taking on this name.’18 This sug-
gests that the federate corps of the sixth century comprised both non-
Roman and Roman soldiers, who were probably individually recruited
rather than recruited in groups like the contemporary allies and former
federates.19 These new federates were not however just special soldiers in
the normal units of the field armies. They received regular pay just as the
soldiers of the field armies did, but they were grouped into their own units
with their own commanders even when they served under a general and
alongside units of the field army on campaigns.20 Although it was most
common to find federates with a field army, they could occasionally serve
alongside frontier troops.21 The federates were therefore something of a
large special forces division with its own hierarchy and officers which could
supplement and stiffen regular field or frontier forces when necessary.
This then was the breakdown of the major divisions of the Byzantine
army of the sixth century. The army was divided between garrison forces
on the frontiers and mobile field armies that did the majority of the heavy
fighting, with special units of federates and temporarily hired units of allies
available to assist where needed. To this picture however must be added
the guardsmen (bucellarii) who generally and loosely defined were pri-
vate retainers of high-ranking officers and officials.22 The origins of the
guardsmen lay in the Germanic tradition of military entourages and in the
Roman institution of personal staff (domestici) that accompanied senior
officials.23 In practice, a guardsman had a dual nature, as both a private
guard and a public soldier. All guardsmen swore loyalty to both their mas-
ter and to the emperor.24 This dual nature made them a useful resource
for a general: Italian observers in the 530s described the importance
18
Procopius Wars 3.11.3.
19
Jones 1964, 1:664.
20
See the description of the military forces under Belisarius in 533: Procopius Wars
3.11.5–15.
21
Jones 1964, 1:665.
22
The definitive work on the bucellarii is Schmitt 1994. See also Gascou 1976 and Haldon
1984, 101–2.
23
Schmitt 1994, 156.
24
Jones 1964, 1:666. Although in a private relationship with their master, bucellarii
received their food and weapons from the state. On the mixture of private and public aspects
of their role, see Lenski 2009, 159.
18 D.A. PARNELL
25
Procopius Wars 7.1.20–21.
26
Procopius Wars 7.1.20. Modern historians have criticized Procopius’ figure. Hugh
Elton has charged that the number is ‘probably an exaggeration’ (Elton 2007, 282). Michael
Whitby argues that this was too large a number of guards to be ‘employed permanently by
an individual’ (Whitby 1995, 117). There is no particular reason why this number has to be
an exaggeration, and neither critic has suggested a plausible motivation for Procopius to
exaggerate it. As Belisarius’ private secretary, Procopius was in excellent position to know
exactly how many bucellarii his boss employed. Moreover, Belisarius is known to have
needed soldiers in the Ostrogothic War, and known to have been rich from his victory over
the Vandals. It is not hard to imagine that he would hire as many soldiers as he could, even
up to 7000. The number does seem unusually high, but this does not mean it is incorrect.
27
Procopius Wars 7.1.18–20, 7.27.3; Agathias Histories 1.19.4–5; Schmitt 1994, 162–3.
28
See Chap. 7.
29
For example, Damianus, the nephew of Valerian, was in command of 400 of his uncle’s
guardsmen (Procopius Wars 6.7.26).
30
Procopius Wars 7.10.1, 7.12.10.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 19
Fig. 2.1 Two men, possibly guardsmen, spearing a tiger. From the Great Palace
Mosaic Museum, Istanbul. Photo by the author.
SIZE AND UNITS
The overall size of the army in terms of numbers of soldiers under arms
is closely related to the number and nature of its divisions. That does not
mean that the size of the army at any specific point is easy to determine.
It is a question that has vexed historians for some time.31 The sources
rarely use exact numbers and when they do it is primarily for a polemi-
cal purpose. The most frequently cited figure for the sixth century is one
given by Agathias, who claimed that the army size ‘attained by the ear-
lier emperors,’ which he specifies as 645,000 men, had dwindled by 559
under Justinian to 150,000.32 Historians have used these figures in various
ways. Theodor Mommsen and A.H.M. Jones both put estimates of the
actual size of the military establishment of the fourth century in range of
the former figure: Mommsen at 554,500 and Jones at 600,000.33 Warren
Treadgold, in a comprehensive review of the available sources combined
with shrewd estimations, argued that Agathias’ second figure referred only
to the field armies. He agreed with this number, setting the size of the field
armies in 559 at 150,000 and estimated the size of the frontier armies to
be slightly larger at 176,000, making the combined army size somewhere
31
See the summary in Treadgold 1995, 3–6.
32
Agathias Histories 5.13.7–8.
33
Mommsen 1889, 257; Jones 1964, 1:683.
20 D.A. PARNELL
around 300,000 men.34 Succeeding scholarship has not veered far from
Treadgold’s estimate.35 That this was the total for a shrunken empire (in
other words, one that did not contain the former Western Roman Empire)
would explain both why the number is smaller than that of the fourth
century and why Agathias might use this information as a polemical com-
plaint. More important than the exact number of soldiers under arms is
that the army of the sixth century was a large and diverse force composed
of many different units spread throughout the empire and organized for
different purposes.
In the daily lives of soldiers and officers, the size of the units to which
they belonged was of considerably more importance than the overall size
of the army. Each of the field armies probably contained between 15,000
and 20,000 soldiers.36 Most large campaign armies during this period were
also likely to have been about 20,000 men strong, including the forces
commanded by Belisarius at Dara in 530 or those commanded by Narses
at Busta Gallorum in 552.37 These armies were of course broken down
into smaller units for easier command and control. The basic units of the
field armies were still the legions, descended from the classical legions of
the early Roman Empire and rich with history. The legions of the sixth
century were smaller than their classical counterparts; each typically con-
tained about 1000 men.38 Soldiers of the federates or the frontier armies
might serve in still smaller units of 500 men, which were also leftovers
of the early empire, named cohorts and alae.39 When desirable, legions
and other units could be combined, or brand new larger combat units of
about 3000 men could be created. Although described variously in literary
sources, sometimes by the region in which their soldiers were recruited
(such as ‘the Army of Isaurians’), these units came to be termed brigades
(moirai).40 It is important to stress that both the size and name of units
larger than a legion could vary considerably. This should not be surprising
34
Treadgold 1995, 59–63.
35
See Haldon 1999, 99–101; Elton 2007, 285; and Lee 2007a, 77. More recent volumes
such as Sarantis and Christie 2013 ignore the question altogether, which indicates that the
answer is perhaps considered settled pending new information.
36
Treadgold 1995, 63. See also Procopius Wars 1.15.11, 1.18.5.
37
Dara: Procopius Wars 1.13.9–39 and see also Haldon 2001, 30. Busta Gallorum:
Procopius Wars 8.29–32 and see also Rance 2005, 447. Compare Elton 2007, 285.
38
Elton 2007, 279.
39
Elton 2007, 280.
40
Elton 2007, 282. Maurice Strategikon 3.6–9.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 21
given the complexity of the institution in question and the period of time
the institution had to evolve.41
On smaller units—within the legion, cohort, or alae—we are on safer
ground thanks to the information provided by the Strategikon of Maurice,
a handbook on military matters created near the end of the sixth centu-
ry.42 The manual talks of regiments (banda), which appear to have been
units of about 500 men or less.43 So a legion would be divided into mul-
tiple banda, but a cohort or alae which was already at a strength of 500
soldiers would not. Regiments were further divided into groups of 100
men, roughly comparable to the centuries of the old Roman legions but
now commanded by officers adorned with the Greek title hecatontarch
(commander of one hundred). These groups were further subdivided into
units of ten men each, commanded by decarchs (commanders of ten),
and then into even smaller squads of four or five men each, commanded
by tetrarchs (commanders of four) and pentarchs (commanders of five)
respectively.44 So during his service in the field army a Roman soldier
would have several layers of camaraderie with his fellow soldiers and his
officers starting with the very close relationships of his five and ten man
squad, then the larger 100 man unit, the 500 man regiment, the 1000
man legion, the several thousand man brigade, and the field army to
which that brigade belonged.
RANKS AND POSITIONS
Although the chain of command of the Byzantine army should be linked
closely to the unit structure just described, it remains somewhat obscure
thanks to the terminology used in the sources. Many positions continued
to have official Latin names, but most literary sources of the period trans-
late these official titles into generic Greek nouns. For example, although
we know from the Codex Justinianus and other sources that the top gener-
als of the empire were titled magistri militum, most of the Greek sources
of the sixth century describe them only as strategoi (generals).45 This sim-
41
Elton 2007, 284.
42
For a good interpretation of the descriptions and diagrams of the Strategikon, see
Treadgold 1995, 93–96.
43
Maurice Strategikon 3.1–4.
44
Maurice Strategikon 1.3.
45
Southern and Dixon 1996, 64. Often the word strategos was modified with geographical
terms to offer an approximation of the Latin title. For example, Procopius describes Belisarius
22 D.A. PARNELL
not as magister militum per Orientem but as being the general (strategos) in command ‘of the
troops of the East’ (Procopius Wars 3.11.1–21).
46
Jones 1964, 1:535. This distinction does not always appear in Greek sources, as both
generals (magistri) of named regions and generals without regional distinction (magistri
militum vacans) were dubbed strategoi.
47
Jones 1964, 2:Map IV.
48
Jones 1964, 1:640.
49
Jones 1964, 1:643, 675.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 23
armies.50 It is precisely these ranks that cause the most confusion in the
literary sources of the sixth century. Authors of the period were eager to
point out the generals in their story (who were often the protagonists or
important as targets of scorn) and usually ignore the officers below the rank
of tribune altogether because they were not considered important enough
to mention. However, officers in between fall in a curious middle ground
where they were important enough to mention but not crucial enough for
the author to provide detailed information about their rank or position. So
although we know the official position names from the Strategikon, literary
sources of the sixth century almost never use those official terms. Procopius
frequently identifies all such mid-ranking officers generically as command-
ers (archons), while Menander and Theophylact have a tendency to use the
equally ambiguous term ‘brigadier’ (taxiarchos).51 None of these authors
use the Latin title comes rei militaris, which was common for mid-level
commanders in the fourth century.52 This terminology generally makes it
impossible to discern just what type of unit an officer commanded or to
determine the exact hierarchy of an army. So although we know that the
army of Belisarius in Italy in the 530s, to take one example, should have
had brigades, legions, and regiments, we cannot know how they were orga-
nized or who commanded them in most instances. When commanders and
senior officers are mentioned, they appear only as archons without further
description of their rank or just what they commanded. In addition to the
difficulties caused by the vague terminology of the sources, the hierarchy
of ranks especially in field armies on campaign (about which the sources
write the most) seems to have been rather less than strict or predictable.
The overall influence or authority an officer had and even his ability to
command the unit to which he was assigned probably depended signifi-
cantly on the personalities of the officers and their relationships with one
50
Jones argued that in the sixth century, dukes could command federates and units of the
field armies (Jones 1964, 1:660, 665). On the increased role of dukes, see also Jones,
Martindale, and Morris 1971 [Hereafter PLRE], Guduin 1, 3:561.
51
John the son of Sisiniolus was sent as a commander with Solomon on his second trip to
Africa and described as an archon (Procopius Wars 4.19.1). Damianus, described as a taxiar-
chos, was employed by the general Tiberius as a messenger to Justin II in 571 (Menander
Protector History 15.5). Vitalius was the commander in charge of the right wing at the Battle
of Solachon in 585 and is also described as a taxiarchos (Theophylact History 2.3.1).
52
On the relationship between the vague titles archon, taxiarchos, and comes rei militaris,
see PLRE 3: Theodorus 21 at 1251 and Stein 1949, 2:814–5.
24 D.A. PARNELL
53
On the importance of personalities and relationships to exercising authority in the army,
see Chap. 5.
54
Maurice Strategikon 1.3.
55
Each regiment had about twelve staff officers, including surgeons, heralds, cape bearers,
trumpeters, and drummers. See Treadgold 1995, 95.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 25
56
Jones 1964, 1:615.
57
Jones 1964, 1:615–9.
58
Ravegnani 1998, 15.
59
Jones 1964, 1:668.
60
Jones 1964, 1:669–670. Southern and Dixon 1996, 65, adds as an additional possibility
for the popularity of military service that prospective recruits were enthusiastic about taking
part in expansionist campaigns.
61
Ward-Perkins 2005, 110–137.
62
Procopius Secret History 19.7.
26 D.A. PARNELL
69
Whitby 1995, 68, 78. See also Ravegnani 1998, 25 on cases of exceptional
recruitment.
70
Teall 1965, 315. See Chap. 3.
71
Fotiou 1988, 67.
72
Fotiou 1988, 68–75.
73
See Chap. 8, ‘The Opinion of Soldiers and Officers’.
28 D.A. PARNELL
army. Whitby argued that it is ‘difficult to detect any decline in the size of
the armies in the late sixth century.’74
The bulk of the evidence, therefore, supports the contention that most
recruitment that occurred in sixth-century Byzantium was voluntary.75 It
must be acknowledged that there is some ambiguity between conscription
and voluntary recruitment, and voluntary recruitment was not always free
from ‘encouragement’ by higher officials or landlords. Especially when a
general showed up with an army in a region to recruit more soldiers, it
is easy to imagine individuals being strong-armed into ‘volunteering’ for
the army.76 Nevertheless, on the whole, the disappearance of explicit laws
on conscription from the Justinian Code, and the improvement in the
quality of a soldier’s lifestyle thanks to the pay raise of Anastasius, meant
that recruitment must usually have been voluntary. The chance to serve
in the army meant a stable living, which to poor Roman peasants must
have been highly desirable. Although just one example, the story of the
future emperor Justin I and his poverty-stricken companions leaving their
homes in the Balkans to move to Constantinople to enlist in the army
is worth remembering.77 Recruits seem always to have been available in
sixth-century Byzantium. The key question for Justinian and subsequent
emperors was not whether they could convince enough soldiers to enlist,
but whether they could pay them once they were under arms.
PROMOTION
Once soldiers had signed up for the army, they could expect steady employ-
ment and usually steady promotion over the course of their military careers,
barring death or disability. Below the hierarchy of officers described earlier
in this chapter was a host of enlisted soldiers whose ranks are almost never
mentioned in the literary sources. In fact, enlisted soldiers are mentioned
by name and as individuals incredibly infrequently altogether, as historians
of the time focused almost exclusively on the officers.78 Despite this lack
of attention, it is clear from the law codes and occasional casual refer-
74
Whitby 1995, 100.
75
Lee 2004, 118.
76
For example, when Belisarius recruited in Thrace before his second campaign in Italy
(Procopius Wars 7.10.1). See Ravegnani 1998, 26.
77
Procopius Secret History 6.2–3.
78
Procopius Wars 8.29.13–28 is a rare example of named enlisted soldiers as active agents
in Procopius’ story. See Chap. 7.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 29
ences that soldiers did have a ladder of ranks that they could climb over
time. Soldiers entered the army with the rank of recruit (tiro) and while
holding this rank did not receive the full pay of a regular soldier. At some
point after recruitment soldiers were promoted to the basic soldier rank
(pedes for infantry, eques for cavalrymen). After an unspecified number of
years of service, soldiers could be promoted to senior soldier (semissalis)
and would then be paid at a rate of one and a half times the salary of the
basic soldier.79 After this sequence, soldiers might be promoted through
a series of higher enlisted ranks, in ascending order: circitor, biarchus, cen-
tenarius, ducenarius, senator, primicerius.80 The primicerius was the most
senior enlisted soldier of his regiment and had the highest salary of all the
enlisted ranks. Of course, not all soldiers would progress through most
of these ranks, let alone reach the rank of primicerius. Such promotion as
did occur for enlisted soldiers seems to have been automatic by length of
service. In other words, promotions occurred at set intervals in a soldier’s
career, essentially independent of the soldier’s performance or reputation.
Seniority and survival were the only essential requirements. Promotions
might come sooner for those who were exceptionally competent or who
offered the correct bribe.81 Instead of receiving promotion along these
ranks, a soldier might be promoted to protector and join the officer ranks.
By the sixth century many senior soldiers received promotion to this rank
near the end of their careers or perhaps as a reward upon retirement.82 Of
course the primary reason soldiers desired promotion was to gain access to
the increased pay that each rank offered. As is to be expected, it seems that
the pay for each grade was sequentially higher than the grade before it.83
The government occasionally tried to use this scale to its financial advan-
tage by slowing or blocking the promotion of lower-ranked soldiers and
encouraging the retirement of higher-ranked soldiers.84 Such a scheme
could save the government money in the short term (or make money
for unscrupulous auditors acting on their own initiative), although at the
expense of the resentment of the soldiers.
79
Treadgold 1995, 90; Jones 1964, 1:634.
80
Jones 1964, 1:634. Compare the analysis of Treadgold 1995, 90–1 and Ravegnani
1998, 33–5.
81
Jones 1964, 1:633.
82
Jones 1964, 1:658. See Chap. 4, ‘Appointment: Gaining a Position.’
83
Treadgold 1995, 149.
84
Procopius Secret History 24.2–6.
30 D.A. PARNELL
85
Elton 2007, 306.
86
Maurice Strategikon 1.5.
87
Jones 1964, 1:391.
88
See Chap. 4.
89
See Chaps. 5 and 6.
BYZANTINE ARMY STRUCTURE 31
Now that some basic features of the Byzantine army of the sixth cen-
tury have been described, we are prepared to analyze the social issues
and relationships that impacted the careers of Byzantine military officers.
This chapter starts this process with an examination of the nature of cul-
tural and ethnic identity in the sixth century and how those identities
impacted the relationships and careers of military men. The study of iden-
tity and its importance in Late Antiquity is lately very much in vogue. It
has been the focus of numerous articles, monographs, and edited vol-
umes.1 Much of this recent work has, however, focused on non-Roman
or post-Roman identity, and therefore has deliberately excluded the study
of early Byzantine identity. So in this chapter it is necessary to explain the
Roman identity of the Byzantines, their conception of the non-Romans
with whom they interacted, and how questions of identity might have
impacted the careers of Byzantine army officers.2
1
It is beyond the scope of this book to provide a complete bibliography of this popular
subject, but as a starting point one might consider Conant 2012, Amory 1997, and Geary
1983. See also Pohl and Heydemann 2013 and, generally, the studies produced as part of the
European Science Foundation’s ‘The Transformation of the Roman World’ series, especially
Pohl and Reimitz 1998.
2
As a reminder, in this book the terms Byzantine and Roman are used more or less inter-
changeably, as the Byzantines considered themselves to be, and were in fact, Romans.
Compare Page 2008, who combines the two terms and refers to ‘Byzantine Romans.’
3
Menander Protector History 6.1.505–6.
4
Agathias Histories 3.21.6, 4.18.1.
5
This kind of change was not new to the sixth century. Roman identity had been forged in
a similar way since the Roman Republic. As peoples (Gauls, Spaniards, Thracians,
Cappadocians, Armenians) were assimilated into the Roman state they adopted Roman nam-
ing conventions over the course of generations.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 35
6
See Mitchell and Greatrex 2000, Pohl 1998, Kaldellis 2007, Kaldellis 2013, Pohl 2012,
Armstrong 1982, Anderson 2006, Poole 1999.
7
Mitchell and Greatrex 2000, xi.
8
Kaldellis 2007, 43. Kaldellis prefers to call the Romans a nation-state rather than simply
a cultural group, and Page prefers to call the Romans an ethnic group (Page 2008, 11–14).
9
Mitchell and Greatrex 2000, xii.
10
Amory 1997, 14.
11
Kaldellis 2007, 83–88. Cicero had recognized that Romans could simultaneously hold a
regional ethnic identity along with their Roman identity centuries earlier. In Book 2 of De
Legibus, he acknowledged that men could have two patriae, one of birth, and one by citizen-
ship. He stressed however that loyalty to Rome took precedence over loyalty to the patria of
one’s birth. Cicero De Legibus 2.5, cited by Ando 2000, 10–11.
12
Kaldellis 2007, 97.
36 D.A. PARNELL
13
See Conant 2012 and, less persuasive but still cited routinely, Amory 1997.
14
See discussion in Kaldellis 2007, 45–47. While Kaldellis argues that the Byzantines really
were Romans, others are less certain and continue to see the Byzantines as only ‘superficially
Roman’ or as one of three ‘post-Roman’ cultures along with the West and the Islamic caliph-
ates. See for example Amory 1997, 31 and Pohl 2012, 22.
15
See, for example, Mango 1980, 13–31 and Ahrweiler and Laiou 1998, 2. For a summary
of this common view, see Kaldellis 2007, 75 and Cameron 2014, 55–57.
16
Kaldellis 2007, 43. Kaldellis further elucidated his views in Kaldellis 2012 and Kaldellis
2013. But see the criticism of Cameron 2014, 55–57. More recently, Kaldellis doubled down
on his argument by positing that the Byzantine state was a monarchically-ruled republic
(Kaldellis 2015).
17
Stouraitis 2014, 179–185. Stouraitis argues that Roman identity in the sense described
by Kaldellis was the mentality only of the ruling elite, which is probably pressing his point
too far (206). That lower classes experienced Roman identity differently is reasonable to
consider. That lower classes felt only to be beleaguered and oppressed by a Roman elite is
not. In a similar vein to Stouraitis, see Page 2008, 50 but see also the criticisms of Kaldellis,
Review of Page, Being Byzantine, in The Medieval Review, April 2009.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 37
meant something different for the poor and the powerless than it did for
the elite authors writing about the Byzantine army of the sixth century.
In this chapter, most of the focus is on the opinions of those elite authors
and the army officers they knew and it is not intended to suggest that all
or even a majority of Byzantines’ opinions are reflected in these definitions
of identity.
By the sixth century, being Roman had ceased to be a matter of being
born in Rome itself or even being a descendant of Roman colonists. The
emperor Caracalla’s edict granting all inhabitants in the empire citizen-
ship in 212 AD, along with centuries of Roman rule, meant that being
Roman was something that largely transcended definition by descent (the
hallmark of an ethnic group).18 An important aspect of the Roman cul-
tural identity was the Romans’ belief that they were superior to peoples
they considered less civilized, most of whom they labeled barbarians.
Barbarism was traditionally set opposite to the civilization of Roman soci-
ety.19 While the Greeks had pioneered the term ‘barbarian,’ Romans had
been at work disengaging the concept from the Greek definition since the
Republic. Greeks saw barbarism in terms of language and descent. For
them, individuals labeled barbarians were not just less civilized; they were
the antithesis of Greeks in every way. The Roman conception of barbar-
ians, emerging particularly clearly in the writing of Cicero, saw barbarians
as uncivilized not because of descent but because of mores, or customs
and character.20 For Romans, barbarians were not just their opposite, but
existed somewhere along a continuum of civilization.21 This suggested
that barbarians could grow more civilized over time, and that some peo-
ples who were labeled barbarian might be less uncivilized than others.
As Kaldellis has suggested, ‘not all barbarians were necessarily barbaric.’22
The Romans certainly did not believe that there was a universal barbarian
culture.23 Since neither Roman identity nor the label of barbarism that the
Romans placed on other peoples depended upon descent, it was possible
18
For a more detailed examination of how Caracalla’s edict changed the nature of Roman
citizenship and raised it above descent identification, see Mathisen 2006.
19
Dauge 1981, 805–809, Lechner 1955, 294.
20
Cicero De Republica 1.58. On the characteristics of the barbarian in Roman eyes, see
Dauge 1981, 424–436 and Revanoglou 2005, 207–212.
21
For further analysis of the Roman evolution of the term from its Greek origins, see Woolf
1998, 58–60.
22
Kaldellis 2013, 10.
23
Pohl 1998, 18.
38 D.A. PARNELL
for barbarians to become Romans. At the same time, it was not guaran-
teed that a barbarian becoming more civilized would become a Roman,
because to become a Roman that individual would have to consciously
choose to join the Roman political community and be accepted into it by
other Romans.24
The Romans believed that the peoples whom they collectively referred
to as barbarians were different ethnic groups and had their own distinct
ethnic identities. While historians used to accept this view uncritically,
today a great mass of scholarship challenges this model. Ethnic identity
in Late Antiquity is currently imagined to have been quite fluid. Patrick
Geary has argued that ‘early medieval ethnicity should be viewed as a sub-
jective process by which individuals and groups identified themselves or
others within specific situations and for specific purposes.’25 Other scholars
have pushed this skepticism even further, which Thomas Noble neatly
explained: ‘Today there is a general consensus that one cannot speak of
Goths, or Franks, or Lombards as discrete ethnic groups.’26 It is not in
the scope of this chapter either to confirm or challenge this recent trend
in the study of the identity of non-Roman ethnic groups. As the focus
here is on the Byzantine army and society, the important issue is what
the Byzantines thought. Whether individuals identified by the Byzantines
really did belong to ‘discrete ethnic groups’ or not is immaterial since
the goal is to understand what the Byzantines thought and how their
thoughts impacted on the way they acted and the way they formed rela-
tionships within the army. All that matters is that Byzantines believed their
non-Roman contemporaries belonged to discrete ethnic groups and made
decisions about them based on that belief.
24
Kaldellis 2007, 91–92; Woolf 1998, 59.
25
Geary 1983, 16.
26
Noble 2006, 16.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 39
to explore some of the cultural criteria that Romans might have used to
determine where an individual or an ethnic group lay upon that contin-
uum. It is worth emphasizing again that in this analysis only Roman opin-
ions matter, since the concept of barbarism and the continuum are both
constructs of the Romans themselves.27 So we should not imagine that
there was a universally accepted set of rules and that all the peoples labeled
by the Romans would have agreed with their assigned place along the
continuum or even been aware of it. To determine what made a Roman
a Roman, it is worthwhile to start with the definition of Kaldellis, who
argued that the basis of the Roman state was ‘a social consensus that all
belonged to a single historical political community defined by laws, insti-
tutions, religion, language, and customs, in other words to a nation.’28
In looking at the differences the Romans drew between themselves and
others, it will be useful to briefly examine the categories of law, institution,
religion, language, and customs. These were the factors that distinguished
Roman identity and set it apart from others. Place of birth or ancestral
origin is appropriately absent from this list. While ancestral origin is an
important component of ethnic identities, larger cultural identities like
that of the Romans placed less of a premium on it. Since any individual
could become Roman regardless of birthplace, ancestry and homeland
mattered relatively little as far as determining Roman identity. Place of
birth was important in the limited sense that individuals born within the
empire would most likely be Romans, given that they were naturally resi-
dents of the empire and citizens, but beyond this it did not seem to matter.
It is true that an individual’s birthplace served as an important identifier
in terms of separating him from homonyms, but this was of no particular
value in determining whether that individual was Roman or not.29 Because
Romans could in theory come from anywhere, a generic definition of a
Roman as one born inside the empire and a barbarian as one born outside
the frontiers is not terribly useful.30
27
Pohl 1998, 18.
28
Kaldellis 2007, 43.
29
Kaldellis 2007, 97, argued something similar, stating that ethnic references used to dif-
ferentiate Romans from one another were actually more geographic than ethnic.
30
Compare Teall 1965.
40 D.A. PARNELL
LAWS AND INSTITUTIONS
In the context of the sixth-century army, the importance of laws and insti-
tutions to Roman identity essentially boiled down to service in the army
and therefore loyalty to the emperor. A good Roman in the Byzantine
army served loyally. This is not to say that all loyal soldiers in the Byzantine
army were automatically Romans. There was a place in Justinian’s armies
for non-Romans as well. Goths, Antians, Persarmenians, and many others
served in regular army units alongside Romans. Service with the Byzantine
army could over time Romanize them both culturally and politically in
the eyes of Roman contemporaries. On the other hand, it is important
to note that one could be a faithful ally of the emperor but remain a
barbarian, as in the ethnically based allies (symmachoi) that served in the
army. Groups represented in this category included Heruls and Huns.
They could remain barbarian, although they might not actually be called
barbarians. The term ‘barbarian’ was much more likely to be used in such
a way that it merely becomes synonymous with ‘enemy.’ In the Buildings,
Procopius makes this quite clear through two similar passages. The first
passage, describing the defenses of the city of Zenobia, suggested that ‘the
barbarians,’ when they attacked the city, could shoot arrows from a certain
hill nearby. In the second passage, describing Hierapolis, he noted that
when ‘the enemy’ tried to lay siege to it, the water of a spring in the city
proved its salvation.31 In these passages, the use of the term ‘barbarian’
merely served as a means of varying vocabulary. Agathias also saw ‘barbar-
ian’ as a synonym for ‘enemy’, as when describing the army of the Franks
marauding through Byzantine Italy.32 So barbarians could be enemies or
servants of the emperor, and not all servants of the emperor were Roman.
Because of this, there was relatively little prejudice against barbarians qua
barbarians but considerable prejudice against barbarians qua enemies.33
Individuals or groups serving the Byzantine army could be severely criti-
cized as barbarians, but this occurred in particular contexts for specific
reasons.34 So not all serving in the army were Romans, but all military
men who considered themselves good Romans had to serve in the Roman
army and have this institutional link to the Roman government. They
31
Procopius Buildings 2.8.21, 2.9.15.
32
The Frankish army is simply ‘the barbarians’ (Agathias Histories 2.1.3).
33
Greatrex 2000, 278.
34
See the section ‘Did Cultural Distinctions Impact Relationships in the Army?’ in this
chapter below.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 41
could not serve a different army and still consider themselves Romans in
a full sense.35
In connection with this discussion of army service and Roman identity,
it is worth taking a moment to consider those who, while not serving the
emperor, were not fighting against him either. Should the civilian, formerly
Roman inhabitants of Italy prior to Justinian’s reconquest be considered
barbarian because they were outside of Roman dominion and could not
serve the emperor? No source ever labels such individuals or groups in
that fashion. Should they then be considered Romans, even if they are not
serving the emperor? This position finds some support in the sources. One
of the more fascinating pieces of evidence is the story Procopius related
about Theodahad’s consulting a Jewish soothsayer about the outcome
of the Gothic war. The soothsayer had Theodahad separate three groups
of pigs, and label them Goths, Romans, and soldiers of the emperor.36
Here the word ‘Romans’ was clearly used to refer to native Italians. This
evidence suggests that being Roman included some components beyond
laws and institutions such that even decades of not being within the empire
did not cause a person to fully lose his or her Roman identity. Yet these
peoples were still distinct. In view of Justinian’s concern for them, and his
expectation that they could at least potentially be allies of his armies, these
people were probably viewed as ‘separated brethren.’ This is an awkward
construct that did not really fit into the traditional Roman paradigm of a
continuity of civilization with Romans at one end and progressively less
civilized people moving down the continuum. These inhabitants of Italy
were still civilized and close to being Roman, but they had been sepa-
rated from political participation in the Roman community, as represented
most clearly in laws, institutions, and devotion to the emperor. Therefore
participation in Roman laws and institutions and the resulting loyalty to
the Roman state was a crucial component of Roman identity, but aspects
of that identity could survive the severing of this connection. While this
35
A partial exception may be made for Roman mutineers such as Stotzas (see Jones,
Martindale, and Morris 1971 [Hereafter PLRE], Stotzas, 3:1199–1200) and Gontharis (see
PLRE 3: Guntharis 2), who certainly did not cease to be Roman when they mutinied against
the emperor. Instead they believed they were carrying on the true tradition of the Roman
military, and in that sense were still Roman, even if their loyalist opponents might not have
agreed.
36
Procopius Wars 5.9.1–7. Only a few lines later, Procopius has Belisarius declare that he
is moved about the fate of Naples, because it has ‘for ages been inhabited by both Christians
and Romans’ (5.9.27).
42 D.A. PARNELL
would have mattered little to the soldiers and officers of the Byzantine
army who, whether Roman or not, were constantly in affiliation with the
state and the emperor, it might have impacted the way these military men
viewed the civilians whose lands they were attempting to conquer.
RELIGION AND LANGUAGE
In trying to assess the nature of Roman identity within the context of
the Byzantine army of the sixth century, it is also appropriate to consider
religion and language. These two criteria share in common the general
rule that they were important contributors to Roman identity but were
neither absolutely required for that identity nor sufficient by themselves
to establish it. While the Byzantine emperor was the sponsor of orthodox
Christianity, the acceptance of that Christianity did not necessarily make
an individual or group Roman by itself. The Tzani are described as origi-
nally being a barbarous people that continually attacked the Byzantines,
but whom the latter managed to convert to Christianity and enroll in their
army. The Tzani were further civilized by the construction of a church in
their lands and also, curiously, by clearing the land around them so that
they could have regular interactions with their neighbors.37 In this way
religion was coupled with laws and institutions as well as interaction and
community to produce civilization. But conversion did not always neces-
sarily entail promotion from barbarism. The Gadabitani, who had probably
followed some sort of polytheism (although Procopius alleges they were
atheists), were made into zealous Christians, but Procopius does not sug-
gest that they were no longer barbarians after this conversion, much less
that they became Romans.38 Similarly, being Gothic was often linked with
Arianism, although evidence about the importance of Arianism to being a
Goth is not abundant and is largely circumstantial.39 Although religion by
itself did not therefore confer membership in the Roman community or
37
Procopius Wars 1.15.21–25, Procopius Buildings 3.6.9–14. For more on the link
between isolation and barbarism, see Procopius Buildings 4.5.9.
38
Procopius Buildings 6.4.11–13. By identifying the Gadabitani as atheists, Procopius
probably meant that they worshiped gods that he did not recognize.
39
We know that most Goths were Arians or were expected to be Arians. As Wolfram points
out, however, there is no evidence that an Arian Goth converting to Catholicism lost his
Gothic identity (Wolfram 1988, 17). Similarly, however, there is little evidence that Goths
were encouraged to become orthodox and even some evidence that Theoderic discouraged
Romans from converting to Arianism (Amory 1997, 275).
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 43
40
Procopius Wars 4.8.9.
41
Procopius Wars 4.14.12.
42
Procopius Wars 4.14.13–15.
43
Codex Justinianus 1.5.7. The inescapable conclusion is that this law represents a tacit
acknowledgment of the existence of individuals from other religious ‘sects’ in the army. More
generally, it is likely that Arians served in the army because most Goths deserting to the
Byzantines were not described as also converting to orthodox Christianity.
44
Anonymous of Valois 12.58, 12.60.
44 D.A. PARNELL
The ability to speak Latin or Greek well was a point of pride for intel-
ligent and cultivated Romans. Not surprisingly, the reverse was also true:
Byzantine sources tended to identify failure to speak well as a trait of bar-
barians. Procopius had Pharas the Herul state, ‘I too am a barbarian and
not accustomed to writing and speaking, nor am I skilful in these matters.’
Agathias noted that his (probably fictitious) orator Aeetes the Lazian was
‘a remarkably gifted speaker for a barbarian and had an instinctive appre-
ciation of the finer points of rhetoric.’45 In a noteworthy story related by
Procopius, a young Antian pretended to be the long-dead Roman gen-
eral Chilbudius. He accomplished this deception by imitating the gen-
eral’s mannerisms and most importantly, by learning Latin.46 The story is
intriguing for its emphasis on the importance of language in assisting in
changing identity.
Yet, to some degree, it could be expected that even some barbarians
might know Greek or Latin and some Romans might not know either.
The Goths who captured the Armenian general Gilacius were perplexed
to learn that the general spoke neither Greek nor Latin and finally gave
up attempts at interrogation.47 Yet just because some non-Romans might
know Greek or Latin does not mean that such knowledge would have
been common. It is probably going too far to suggest as Amory does that
all Goths in Italy after Theoderic spoke Latin and that Gothic was merely a
military pidgin language.48 Indeed, the Gothic language was an important
part of Gothic identity, if the historian Jordanes is to be believed. In the
time of Valens (r. 364–378), the Visigoths having become Arians appar-
ently ‘invited all people of their speech everywhere to attach themselves
to this sect,’ which indicates a correlation between religion, language and
identity. This may be favorably contrasted with the disdain that Jordanes
held for the Huns, who were scarcely human and had ‘no language save
45
Procopius Wars 4.4.15, Agathias Histories 3.8.8. Kaldellis has convincingly argued that
Aeetes is an example of Agathias’ mythological mimesis, that the Lazian probably never
existed, and that the speeches outlined in this passage never occurred (Kaldellis 2003). Here
it is not the historicity of either Aeetes or his speech that matters, but the fact that both
Agathias and his audience could presume that a barbarian would not be a good speaker and
be surprised when that presumption was contradicted.
46
Procopius Wars 7.14.36.
47
Procopius Wars 7.26.24. Gilacius’ lack of knowledge of Greek or Latin does not seem to
have prevented him from being considered Roman.
48
Amory 1997, 102–106. He argues that there ‘can be no doubt’ that all Goths spoke
Latin and some spoke Greek. His argument that Gothic was merely a ‘military pidgin’ goes
too far.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 45
one which bore but slight resemblance to human speech.’49 The opposi-
tion of the Gothic elite in the 530s to Amalasuntha’s attempt to educate
her son Athalaric in classical Roman fashion may also be an indication
of the importance of the Gothic language, its perceived difference from,
and opposition to Roman speech and culture.50 Language was therefore
an important component of identity. At the same time, merely knowing
a language did not make an individual Roman and merely not knowing a
language did not disqualify an individual from being Roman. Language,
like religious affiliation, was an important but not sufficient factor in the
definition of cultural identity. The ability to speak Latin or Greek well
made it easier to be accepted as a Roman but did not itself make an indi-
vidual Roman.
CUSTOMS
The last component of Roman identity to consider is customs, which
can be interpreted quite broadly to include cultural practices and tradi-
tions as well as certain protocols in dress, hair, or other physical attri-
butes. Cultural practices, traditions, and personality traits, although often
trumpeted in the sources, may be discounted as more rhetorical tropes
than crucial components of Roman identity. For example, Romans were
expected in theory to be virtuous, brave, and obedient, but this would not
necessarily actually set them apart from non-Romans, who were expected
to be brave and could be virtuous and obedient as well. These issues most
frequently appear in the sources in the context of criticizing barbarians for
failing to live up to these standards rather than praising Romans for their
practices. Agathias described Phulcaris the Herul as both brave and fear-
less but also wild and impetuous. After Narses had punished a murderer in
the ranks of the Heruls, Agathias argued that their subsequent quarreling,
sulking and refusing to fight was the ‘usual barbarian reaction.’ Likewise,
after Belisarius had punished murderers on the way to Africa, Procopius
reported that ‘the barbarians’ were angry and resentful.51
These statements boil down to rhetorical flourishes and probably do
not say much about the actual content of Roman identity beyond the fact
49
Jordanes Getica 24.22, 25.133. Jordanes’ disdain for the Hunnic language may be due
to the fact that it was not within the Indo-European language group.
50
Procopius Wars 5.2.6–20.
51
Agathias Histories 1.14.3, 2.7.4, Procopius Wars 3.12.10.
46 D.A. PARNELL
52
On poor behavior of Roman military officers, see Chap. 4.
53
Agathias Histories 4.4.1.
54
Pohl and Reimitz 1998, 42–64.
55
Procopius Secret History 7.8–10, 14.2. Although neither Justinian nor these youths actu-
ally became barbarians through these actions, these anecdotes do say something about the
(negative) opinions of contemporaries with regard to the appearance of unassimilated bar-
barians. In the fifth century, Priscus of Panium also distinguished a Hunnic haircut. See
Priscus Frag. 269.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 47
56
Anonymous of Valois 14.83.
57
Menander History 2.24–27.
58
Evagrius Ecclesiastical History 6.14.
48 D.A. PARNELL
59
John throughout his text identifies Philadelphia as ‘my Philadelphia’ (John Lydus On
Magistracies 3.26, 3.58, 3.59). It is tempting to suggest that this possessive indicates attach-
ment, but it is equally possible that it was merely meant to indicate which Philadelphia he was
describing. John was greatly assisted in his career by the prefect Zoticus, also from Philadelphia
in Lydia (3.26).
60
This was done to avoid confusion with, for example, Philadelphia in Arabia (modern
Amman in Jordan).
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 49
61
Procopius Wars 1.8.3.
62
Kaldellis 2007, 94.
63
See Parnell 2010 for the complete database and further explanation of its creation. For
another attempt to sort knowledge of individuals into a database, see Whately 2013.
64
A complete list of the sources used to construct the database: Procopius, Agathias,
Malalas, Marcellinus, Menander, Chronicon Paschale, Theophylact, Theophanes, John
Lydus, John of Ephesus, John of Epiphania, Evagrius, Corippus, Pope Gregory I, and PLRE,
which draws on additional sources including inscriptions and seals. For full citations, please
see the bibliography.
50 D.A. PARNELL
information was provided about him. The result was a database of 772
men who served in the Byzantine army between the beginning of the reign
of Justin I (518–527) and the end of the reign of Phocas (602–610). This
total, an average of about eight entries for every year of the covered period,
is not overwhelming in size. To give a fair perception of how the size of the
database compares to the actual number of soldiers in service, there may
have been about 700,000 men under arms in the field armies alone dur-
ing this 92-year period.65 The database of 772 men represents only 0.1%
of this total. While this is a very small sample and therefore conclusions
drawn from it must be treated cautiously, the total is not insignificant. The
sample is also heavily weighted toward the senior officers that tended to
attract attention in literary histories or to leave behind physical evidence
of their careers. However, the sample is surely more representative of the
army as a whole during this period than simply glancing at the lists of the
generals in the back of the Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, for
example.66
Creating this database and listing out all named individuals was the
easy part of this process. In order to utilize this information to make an
argument about the prevalence and role of non-Romans in the army, as
many individuals in the database as possible had to be categorized as either
Roman or non-Roman. For some individuals, the sources themselves pro-
vide a cultural (Roman or barbarian), or ethnic (Goth or Vandal, for exam-
ple) identifying label. In such cases, the sources are generally to be trusted,
since they knew far more than we do about the individual being described
and it is their opinion that matters for this analysis. For the many indi-
viduals who are not clearly labeled with an identity, a variety of tools may
be employed to discover their origins, including looking at information
about their family members, if any has been recorded.67 When this is not
65
The figure of 700,000 men was reached by estimating that the average term of service in
the sixth-century army was about 20 years. The figure of 150,000 men in the comitatenses
was then multiplied by the number of years covered (92) and divided by the average years of
service (20). The exact result (690,000) was then rounded up to the more approximate fig-
ure of 700,000. This is of course only a very general estimation and should not be considered
a completely accurate representation of the army. Only the comitatenses were included in this
calculation because most of the men in the database served in these units. If the limitanei are
also included, there were approximately 1.5 million men in the army during these 92 years,
and then the database figure of 772 represents only about 0.05% of the total.
66
Elton 2007, 300–301.
67
See Chap. 6.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 51
68
For determining identities through name alone, the following resources are particularly
useful: Justi 1895, Maenchen-Helfen 1973, Schönfeld 1911.
69
Amory 1997, 87–91.
70
Amory 1997, 464–465.
71
Elton 2007, 300–301.
72
Pohl and Reimitz 1998, 10.
52 D.A. PARNELL
fered from army mutinies and attacks of the Moors, and Belisarius strug-
gled in the east against Persia. All of these reasons make 540 a reasonable
dividing line. The year 565 also makes for a convenient year of division
because it is the year of Justinian’s death and the accession of Justin II, who
made a conscious effort to break with his predecessor’s policies. As Justin
himself rather pompously proclaimed, ‘to the military, which had already
slipped through lack of necessities so that the state was being damaged by
the incursions and extensive invasions of barbarians, we have accorded the
necessary rectification, so far as it was in our power to do so.’75 These rec-
tifications probably included replacing the army’s high command and may
well have been responsible for the Lombard invasion of Italy, beginning in
568, which destroyed the fragile hold of Byzantium upon the peninsula
and shattered hopes that it would be successfully revitalized and incorpo-
rated into the empire. Justin II also witnessed, in 573, the fall of Dara to
the Persians, which affected the balance of power in Mesopotamia and was
apparently so disturbing that it caused the emperor to lose his mind. These
combined events essentially heralded the decline of the Justinianic system
and paved the way for changing political and military policies.
Before discussing the results of dividing the individuals in the data-
base into these chronological periods, it is fair to explain the method
used in dividing them. First and foremost, military men were counted in
the period during which they first appeared in the service. For example,
Belisarius is counted in the first period (518–540), while Comentiolus,
one of Maurice’s prominent generals, is counted in the final period
(566–610). In addition, all individuals whose service straddled two peri-
ods were counted in both periods in which they served, so for example
Belisarius is also counted in the second period (541–565). Another caveat
that should be noted is that only 574 of the 772 total entries were used in
the generation of these statistics. This is because the 198 excluded entries
were impossible to date with sufficient specificity. Inscriptions and seals
especially are frequently dated as ‘sixth century’ or ‘mid-sixth to mid-
seventh century,’ which means that they cannot be safely located within
one of the three periods. Because of this difficulty, they have simply been
excluded from the calculation so that they do not throw off the result. All
of the remaining 574 individuals can be securely dated to the period(s)
they have been assigned. With these caveats in place, Table 3.1 shows the
breakdown of the Roman and non-Roman military men in the database
over the course of the sixth century.
75
Justin II’s novel 148, preface, as quoted by Whitby 1995, 119.
54 D.A. PARNELL
Table 3.1 Ratio of Roman to non-Roman military men in the database, 518–610
AD
Period Number of Romans Number of non-Romans Total for period
76
This might be taken as confirmation of Teall’s hypothesis that crises in the 540s caused
the empire to recruit more non-Romans than before (Teall 1965, 303–7) if one wanted to
draw a conclusion from this admittedly small shift.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 55
Another way that the database helps to show what roles non-Romans
played in the army is by demonstrating the ranks and positions held by both
Roman and non-Roman officers. It is often difficult to determine exactly
what rank an individual held. The sources generally prefer non-technical
Greek words to precise Latin terms.78 It is easier, therefore, to follow the
lead of the sources and group officers into non-technical rank categories
than it is to break them down into specific ranks or titles. For the sake of
convenience, the entries in the database may be divided into these rank
categories: generals (magistri militum), commanders (taxiarchoi, archons,
duces or comites rei militaris), regimental commanders (tribunes), low-
ranking officers (such as regimental staff officers and protectors), guards-
men of generals (bucellarii), imperial guardsmen (excubitores, candidati,
scribones, scholarii), enlisted soldiers, and ‘others’ (unspecified ranks). The
following two figures (Figs. 3.1 and 3.2) give an idea of the breakdown
77
Examples abound in Pope Gregory the Great’s letters, including Guduin, duke at Naples
in 603 (Gregory Epistle 14.10) and Aldio, general in Italy in 599 (Gregory Epistle 2.32).
78
See Chap. 2 for more on the ranks and positions of the sixth-century army.
56 D.A. PARNELL
79
The data in the charts counts each individual’s rank, as might be expected, but there is
one additional twist. All officers who are known to have received promotion are counted for
each step of their career. For example, an individual such as John Mystacon, Maurice’s gen-
eral of the East (magister militum per Orientum), is counted only once, at the rank of gen-
eral, while Belisarius, who started his career as a guardsman of Justinian and later served as a
duke in Mesopotamia before being promoted to general is therefore counted three times, in
each of these categories. Only 40 of the 772 total men in the database were definitely pro-
moted and thus counted multiple times, but this undoubtedly reflects the incompleteness of
the sources rather than any real lack of promotion in the army.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 57
much closer in the numbers of commanders, where they are only outnum-
bered 127 to 66 (66 % of all commanders were Roman). Since Table 3.1
suggests that the database contains the greatest number of non-Romans in
the period 541–565, and Fig. 3.3 suggests that non-Romans were particu-
larly prominent as commanders, it is interesting to combine the two facts.
The results of this may be seen in the last cluster of Fig. 3.3, which counts
the commanders in the database during the period 541–565 only. Here is
one area where non-Romans outnumber Romans, 34 to 28 (55 % of all
commanders in this period were identified as non-Roman). In a period in
which the database suggests that only 38 % of all entries were non-Roman,
this is an interesting deviation. Apparently the importance and incidence
of non-Roman officers in the early Byzantine army was concentrated at the
middle level of the command hierarchy. In other words, non-Roman com-
manders most frequently served under Roman generals. This tendency is
most notably played out in the importance of non-Roman commanders of
units of allies (symmachoi), such as the commanders of the Heruls.
In the lower ranks, enlisted soldiers are at similar proportions across
both groups: around 5.5 % (33) of the Roman sample and 7 % (14) of the
non-Roman sample. Of course the vast majority of those serving in the
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 59
Byzantine army would have been enlisted soldiers. The fact that they are
so poorly represented in the database (and thus in the sources) is surely
because authors recorded information about prominent officers, not the
soldiers they commanded.80 As for other categories, non-Romans have a
proportionally larger number of the guardsmen of generals (bucellarii)
(17 % to 6 %) and Romans have a proportionally larger number of impe-
rial bodyguards of some type or another (10 % to 2 %). These statistics
are interesting by themselves but taken together affect the question of
the differences in career advancement between Romans and non-Romans
during this period. This distinction could indicate that military men gave
out appointments in their guard units based on individual merit without
concern for the identity of the applicant, but that the imperial government
knowingly discriminated in favor of Romans when selecting attendants
for the emperor. Having examined the evidence of the database, it is now
time to turn to issues like this which indicate how Roman and non-Roman
identity impacted the careers and relationships of Byzantine army officers.
80
For ideas on the relationships between officers and their soldiers, see Chap. 7.
81
Cf. Greatrex, who notes that there appears to be ‘little consistent hostility or prejudice
towards particular ‘barbarians’ in the sources of the sixth century’ (Greatrex 2000, 276).
60 D.A. PARNELL
82
See Parnell 2010, 83–84, and appendices.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 61
83
For a summary of these events, see Stein 1949.
62 D.A. PARNELL
84
Agathias Histories 4.20.7.
85
Procopius Wars 2.3.22–27.
86
See the below section ‘Did Cultural Distinctions Impact Relationships in the Army?’ for
further analysis of praise of non-Romans in military service.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 63
enshrined in law, but the emperors and top military officers might have
subconsciously shied from giving non-Romans too many appointments
as generals or imperial guardsmen. This subtle prejudice was no doubt
married to a firm conviction that it was proper tradition that non-Romans
should not occupy too many of such positions in the military. Indeed,
non-Romans themselves might even have bought into this prejudicial
belief that it was not appropriate for them to serve in the imperial body-
guard or to rise too high in the ranks. Many non-Romans may have firmly
believed that their place was instead in combat armies in positions high
enough to lead their brethren but low enough to allow them to engage in
combat frequently. The power of tradition acknowledged by both Romans
and non-Romans, combined with this practically subconscious unease and
prejudice against non-Romans, is probably the explanation for the inter-
esting but unequal penetration of non-Romans into high military ranks.
The Byzantine attitude towards non-Romans in the army in the sixth cen-
tury was therefore a confusing jumble of old prejudices, common sense
based on practical experience, and historical propaganda.
87
The majority of the remainder of this chapter appeared originally in Parnell 2015b. De
Gruyter Byzantinische Zeitschrift, Walter De Gruyter GmbH Berlin Boston, 2016. Copyright
and all rights reserved. Material from this publication has been used with the permission
of Walter De Gruyter GmbH.
88
Compare Greatrex 2000 on political loyalty as the primary defining feature of Roman
identity in this period. As mentioned above in the section ‘The Distinction between Romans
and Barbarians,’ I would argue there were many different criteria that together defined
Roman identity.
64 D.A. PARNELL
situations that show how issues of identity might have impacted on the
relationships between officers in the army. First, the term was deployed
in a pejorative sense when individuals of perceived non-Roman identity
were behaving badly, as a sort of literary shorthand for disapproval. In
these situations, Roman contemporaries were influenced by the first and
third layers of their attitude toward non-Romans highlighted in the previ-
ous section, namely traditional propaganda and nearly subconscious preju-
dice. Second, an author might utilize the word in a more neutral fashion
if he needed to make a quick reference to traditional barbarian tropes
to prove a point, even if that point was not criticism of the individual
or specific group of individuals under consideration at the moment. In
these scenarios, Romans were affected mainly only by the first layer of
the attitude, namely traditional propaganda and terminology. Finally, an
author might refer to non-Romans in military service simply by name or
perceived ethnic identity and avoid using the term ‘barbarian’ altogether.
Here the second layer discussed above affected Roman opinions, that is,
their fair assessment and practical acceptance of non-Romans who served
well. These uses of or intentional failures to use the term ‘barbarian,’ dem-
onstrate how these complex opinions held by Roman authors and officers
impacted their opinions of and their relationships with the non-Romans in
their military service. Even the most strained relationships and the angri-
est use of the term ‘barbarian’ showed little or no consistent prejudice
that would have made relationships between officers of differing identities
impossible.
To illustrate this issue in all its complexity, it is worthwhile to return
to the depiction of Pharas in the works of Procopius, which we first
encountered in the Introduction. As assessor (secretary and chief-of-staff)
of Belisarius, Procopius had personal contact with officers and soldiers
throughout Belisarius’ armies. This is not to say that Procopius is a per-
fect and always trustworthy source, but of all the sources for the sixth
century, he was best positioned to know what military officers thought
of their fellow officers, non-Roman or not.89 After Belisarius’ decisive vic-
tory over the Vandals at Tricamarum in December 533, the Vandal King
Gelimer fled into the mountains of Numidia. Belisarius appointed Pharas
to besiege and capture Gelimer. Procopius describes Pharas in this fashion:
89
We have to be wary that Procopius might have used barbarians as a foil to indirectly criti-
cize Justinian or Belisarius. Cf. Kaldellis 2013, 21–25 but see also the caution of Greatrex,
‘Procopius and the Barbarians’ (forthcoming).
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 65
Pharas was energetic and thoroughly serious and upright in every way,
although he was a Herul by birth. And for a Herul not to give himself over
to treachery and drunkenness, but to strive after uprightness, is no easy mat-
ter and merits abundant praise. But not only was it Pharas who maintained
orderly conduct, but also all the Heruls who followed him.90
90
Procopius Wars 4.4.29–31, translated by Dewing 1914, 2:243.
91
Procopius Wars 4.4.9–25.
92
For the career of John the Armenian, see PLRE 3: Ioannes 14. For the career of Uliaris,
see PLRE 3: Vliaris 1.
93
Procopius Wars 4.4.16–17.
94
For the career of Pharas, see PLRE 3: Pharas.
95
Procopius Wars 1.13.19–20.
96
Procopius Wars 1.14.32–33.
66 D.A. PARNELL
his men, in stock terms, for making ‘a display of valorous deeds’ dur-
ing the battle.97 As in the later description of Pharas in Book IV of the
Wars, in all these comments Procopius avoided labeling Pharas or his
men barbarians, while at the same time clearly acknowledging that they
were Heruls.
Back in Africa, Pharas’ siege of Gelimer wore on into 534. Pharas
decided upon a new strategy. Procopius explains that Pharas sent a let-
ter to Gelimer, in an attempt to convince the Vandal king to surrender.
The letter is likely an invention of Procopius, and even if there really was
a letter, the specific language Procopius records is almost certainly what
Procopius believes that Pharas should have sent rather than what Pharas
actually would have written himself.98 This exchange between Pharas
and Gelimer has attracted quite a bit of attention in modern scholarship,
with the best examination being an analysis by Charles Pazdernik linking
Procopius’ version of these events to a passage in Xenophon’s Hellenica.99
In the passage in question, the Spartan king Agesilaus attempts to convince
Pharnabazus, a Persian satrap, to escape from ‘slavery’ to the Persian king
and become a free man (and Spartan ally).100 The purpose of Pazdernik’s
comparison of this episode and the letter of Pharas is, however, to draw
out Procopius’ opinions of the relationships between Justinian, Belisarius,
and Gelimer, not to examine Procopius’ view of Pharas.101 If Pazdernik is
right, and it seems likely that he is, then Procopius carefully tailored the
exchange between Pharas and Gelimer in order to create an oblique refer-
ence to the Hellenica episode, linking the Persian king and Justinian, and
therefore make a point about Belisarius’ current servility, Gelimer’s future
servility, and Justinian’s autocracy. In such a scenario, Procopius did not
craft this passage with Pharas particularly in mind—he merely played a role
in an exchange with a more ambitious goal. Therefore it is not surprising
that the passage does not say much about Pharas himself. What it does say
may be assumed to be Procopius’ view of Pharas rather than Pharas’ view
of himself, given that it has been established that Procopius likely wrote
the letter.
97
Procopius Wars 1.14.39.
98
Knaepen 2001, 401; Rubin 1954, 144; Kaldellis 2004, 187.
99
Pazdernik 2006. See also Kaldellis 2013, 20; Wood 2011, 439–440; and Sarantis 2011,
396.
100
Xenophon Hellenica 4.1.34–36.
101
Pazdernik 2006, 176–182, esp. Figure 1 on 180.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 67
102
Procopius Wars 4.6.15. For another individual being made to admit his own barbarism,
see the confession of Basiliscus in Life of Daniel the Stylite 84 (in Dawes and Baynes 1977).
I am indebted to Geoffrey Greatrex for this reference.
103
Similarly, Basiliscus’ admission of barbarism in the Life of Daniel the Stylite comple-
ments his acknowledgement in the same sentence that he is ‘not able to understand the
depths of the holy faith.’
104
On barbarism and illiteracy, see Taragna, 2000, 87–88. For a parallel to Pharas’ admis-
sion of poor speaking skills, see Agathias’ description of Aeetes the Lazian (Agathias Histories
3.8.8).
105
Pazdernik 2006, 183–184, 197–201.
106
Procopius Wars 4.6.22.
68 D.A. PARNELL
If any barbarian who has slain his kinsman expects to find indulgence in his
trial on the ground that he was drunk, in all fairness he makes the charge so
much worse by reason of the very circumstance, by which, as he alleges, his
guilt is removed. For it is not right for a man under any circumstances, and
especially when serving in an army, to be so drunk as readily to kill his dear-
est friends; indeed the drunkenness itself, even if the murder is not added at
all, is worthy of punishment.115
112
The closest Procopius comes to calling Pharas a Roman is the announcement, in the
form of Pharas’ letter, that Pharas is ‘in the service of an emperor’ (Procopius Wars 4.6.22).
As we have seen, however, this is not the same as actually being Roman.
113
But note the warning of Kaldellis that Late Antique authors ‘were not uncritical imita-
tors of ancient tropes’ and that ‘ancient theory… was more a useful tool than a mental
straitjacket’ (Kaldellis 2013, 9). Cesa also argues that Procopius was cautious about utilizing
traditional clichés (Cesa 1982, 211–212).
114
The criticism of Heruls in general might have also had something to do with the fact
that those not serving in the Byzantine military apparently regularly plundered the empire
from their base at modern Belgrade (Procopius Wars 7.33.13–14). See Sarantis 2011, 395.
115
Procopius Wars 3.12.17–18, translated by Dewing 1914, 2:115–17.
70 D.A. PARNELL
116
Procopius Wars 3.12.16.
117
Cf. Wood 2011, 429–430.
118
Agathias Histories 1.20.3, translated by Frendo 1975, 28, modified.
119
Agathias Histories 1.20.6, translated by Frendo 1975, 28, modified.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 71
Roman, and that Narses welcomes him to ‘his side,’ but does not dub him
a Roman. It seems that the plan is for Aligern to serve the Byzantine side
despite his non-Roman status. Aligern’s non-Roman status is emphasized
with the phrase ‘barbarian connections,’ but this is done as neutrally as
possible, perhaps in recognition of the fact that Aligern is leaving those
connections behind.
Later in the sixth century, Byzantine authors still labored over when
to label a non-Roman in military service a barbarian. Kurs, a general
in Byzantine service, was not singled out for any special literary treat-
ment in spite of the fact that he was most likely a Hun.120 The historian
Menander simply names him along with his colleague, ‘the generals Kurs
and Theodorus.’121 There is nothing to single Kurs out as unusual here.
More strikingly, the historian Theophylact passes over an easy opportunity
to label Kurs a barbarian or his behavior barbaric. In the late summer of
582, a Byzantine army under the command of John Mystacon squared
off against a Persian army. According to Theophylact, ‘Kurs did not join
battle, since he begrudged John success on the grounds that he was con-
tending for greatest glory.’122 Here, although Kurs withheld his participa-
tion in the battle out of jealousy for his commanding officer, and caused
the Byzantines to lose, Theophylact does not lash out at him or label
him a barbarian. The only way we know that Kurs was probably a Hun is
because of a passing comment by the church historian Evagrius, labeling
him a ‘Scythian.’123
We might compare this restraint of Theophylact with regard to the
term ‘barbarian’ with a similar situation related by Procopius. In 533,
as Belisarius prepared to engage the Vandals in battle, Procopius tells us
that the Huns held a discussion amongst themselves. They agreed not to
fight at the beginning of the battle, but to wait to see which side won,
and then to join the victors. Procopius writes, ‘Thus had this matter been
decided upon by the barbarians.’124 Why Procopius labeled the Huns here
as barbarians, but Theophylact did not label Kurs a barbarian, could boil
down to vocabulary differences between the two authors. Perhaps the use
of the term ‘barbarian’ had changed over the course of the sixth century.
120
For the career and identity of Kurs, see PLRE 3: Cours.
121
Menander Frag. 18.6.
122
Theophylact History 1.9.9.
123
Evagrius Ecclesiastical History 5.14. On the identification of Evagrius’ Kurs with
Theophylact’s Kurs, see PLRE 3: Cours.
124
Procopius Wars 4.2.3.
72 D.A. PARNELL
125
Compare PLRE 3:361, which posits that his behavior in this battle perhaps ended his
career, because he is not attested after this. Getting fired, of course, would not really be a
barbarian-specific problem either.
126
On jealousy in the sixth century, see Peter and John the Glutton informing Justinian
about Belisarius’ alleged plot so that they could get the general out of the East (Procopius
Secret History 4.1–16) and the protracted conflict between Belisarius and Narses and their
supporters in Italy in 538–539, culminating in John and Justin telling Belisarius that they
‘would do nothing except what Narses commanded’ (Procopius Wars 6.21.13–16). These
episodes are examined in greater detail in Chap. 5. The pride and jealousy of politician-
generals in the Late Republic is well known. See Gruen 1974 for a classic study of the issue.
127
Contra Pohl, who argues that ‘Procopius did not much approve of the non-Roman
composition of the Roman military’ (Pohl 2006, 18). On the other hand, Wood argues that
Procopius ‘is prepared to see virtue in those beyond the bounds of the Roman world’ (Wood
2011, 446).
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 73
128
Examples are to be found throughout the works of Procopius, Agathias, and other
sixth-century authors. For select examples used in this chapter, see Procopius’ first reference
to Pharas (Procopius Wars 1.13.19), Procopius’ reference to Sisifridus (Procopius Wars
7.12.12) and Menander’s reference to Kurs (Menander Frag. 18.6). For additional examples,
see Procopius’ references to Sunicas and Aigan (Procopius Wars 1.13.20), Procopius’ refer-
ence to Asbadus (Procopius Wars 8.26.13), and Agathias’ references to Balmach, Cutilzis,
and Iliger (Agathias Histories 3.17.5).
129
Kaldellis 2012, 393 and Page 2008, 44. Similarly, Mathisen argues that a barbarian
simply settling in the empire did not automatically become a Roman citizen; he had to make
use of Roman laws and behave as a Roman citizen for that to occur. See Mathisen 2012, 754.
130
Procopius Wars 7.12.12.
131
Compare Greatrex 2000, 268–269 and n. 9.
132
See, for example, Agathias Histories 2.7.4. In this case, the Heruls, although generally
loyal to Narses up to this point, slipped into what Agathias exasperatedly labeled ‘irrational’
barbarian behavior.
133
On ethnicity as a matter of curiosity rather than import under certain circumstances, see
Kaldellis 2007, 95 and Greatrex 2000, 268.
74 D.A. PARNELL
uncivilized persisted and could be drawn upon at any time.134 Even as they
praised non-Romans who behaved well, Byzantine authors knew it was
possible for those non-Romans to behave poorly and were prepared to
deploy this rhetoric, pejoratively or not, whenever they deemed it appro-
priate. The term and its associated vocabulary seem to have been most
prominently used with regard to non-Romans in military service in two
types of situation. If the non-Romans in question were behaving badly, the
author was likely to use the terminology in a hostile tone, invoking the top
and bottom layer of the Byzantine attitude toward non-Romans discussed
in the previous section. If there was no particular bad behavior in question
and the author simply needed to make a stock reference to the traditional
rhetoric of barbarism to prove a point or further an analogy, the author
was likely to use the terminology in a neutral tone, drawing mainly only
on the top layer of the Byzantine attitude. The Pharas example falls into
the latter category. Procopius had nothing negative to say about Pharas
and his soldiers, but felt it necessary to have Pharas self-identify as a bar-
barian to further the author’s argument connecting Gelimer to Pharas
and Belisarius as servants of Justinian. The example of Aligern also fits this
reason for the use of barbarian terminology. Agathias had nothing nega-
tive to say about the Goth; on the contrary he was making the right deci-
sion by allying with the Roman cause. But it was helpful to categorize his
former connections as barbarian to emphasize the correctness of his new
course. Finally, the examples involving the Huns, first their defense of a
drunken murder, and then their decision to behave treacherously in battle
in North Africa, represent the other reason for deploying barbarian-related
terminology: the barbarian behaving badly. These groups are pejoratively
labeled barbarians not solely because of their perceived ethnic background
or non-Roman status, but because of that status in conjunction with their
poor behavior.135 In these situations, as the bottom layer with its subcon-
scious prejudice might suggest, the labeling of non-Romans might have
been influenced by or colored by lingering memories and fears in collec-
tive Byzantine memory.
134
Compare Greatrex 2000, 274: ‘Naturally traditional distinctions between Romans and
barbarians continued to be drawn, but they had decreasing relevance to current realities.’
135
Compare Pohl 2006, 18–19, who suggests that ‘the analogy between barbarians and
passionate behavior was deep-rooted in a Roman’s mind’ and therefore Romans could not
really separate the generally inappropriate behavior of a soldier from the specific prejudice
against barbarian behavior.
IDENTITY IN THE ARMY: ROMANS AND BARBARIANS 75
For Byzantine military officers of the sixth century, or at least for the
authors who wrote about these men, barbarians were not just enemies
of the Roman state, nor were they simply only the people who opposed
the emperor.136 Non-Romans could in fact loyally serve the emperor and
work in the Byzantine military without actually being Roman. But even
though Byzantine authors recognized these individuals as non-Romans,
they did not always label them barbarians. Those in military service who
were called barbarians in a hostile fashion were those who came from non-
Roman backgrounds and also lived up to barbarian stereotypes in their
behavior. In doing so they caused all the fears, suspicion, and prejudice in
the background of Byzantine memory to come spilling to the surface. For
the most part, having only one of these two conditions was not enough
to earn a non-Roman a pejorative barbarian label from a sixth-century
author. An individual had to have both the background, with its lack of
membership in the Roman political community, and the poor behavior,
in order to be criticized as a barbarian. Byzantine military service, even
with good behavior, did not immediately turn non-Romans into Romans,
as seen with Pharas, Aligern, and Sisifridus, but it did at least shield them
from the pejorative use of the term ‘barbarian.’
So in the sixth-century Byzantine army, Romans and non-Romans gen-
erally served alongside one another without issue, sharing common expe-
riences, dangers, victories, and defeats. However, concluding that Romans
and non-Romans could cooperate in Byzantine military service is not the
same thing as saying that cultural identity did not matter or that there
was no distinction at all. As we have seen, Byzantines in general were very
aware of the identity of individuals and groups, and jealously guarded
Roman identity. Non-Romans could become Roman, but to do so they
needed to join the Roman polity and reflect that membership through
participation in the laws, institutions, religion, language, and customs of
the Byzantine Empire. That some, perhaps even many, non-Romans did
so is reflected in the gradual decrease of the proportion of non-Romans
in the Byzantine army over the course of the sixth century. Non-Romans
penetrated the Byzantine army at all levels, although succeeded in get-
ting promotion to some ranks (mid-level commanders and guardsmen
of generals, for example) more than others (such as generals and imperial
guardsmen). Romans within the Byzantine army had a complex, triple-
layered attitude toward these non-Romans. On a superficial level, they
136
Compare Pohl 2004, 448 and Greatrex 2000, 274.
76 D.A. PARNELL
1
Procopius Wars 4.24.2. On the career of Artabanes, see Jones, Martindale, and Morris
1971 [Hereafter PLRE], Artabanes 2, 3:125–30.
2
Consider the postings of the Persarmenian brothers Narses and Aratius to Egypt and
Palestine respectively in 535 (PLRE 3: Narses 2, at 929 and Aratius, at 103) and then even
further away to Italy in 538 (Procopius Wars 6.13.16–17) and the posting of captured
Vandal soldiers (the Vandali Justiniani) to the Eastern front in 535 (4.14.17).
3
Procopius Wars 4.28.29–43.
4
Procopius Wars 7.31.2–14.
5
Procopius Wars 7.31.15–32.51.
6
Procopius Wars 7.39.8.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 79
7
Jones 1964, 1:634.
8
Jones 1964, 1:641.
9
Jones 1964, 1:390.
10
Jones 1964, 1:528–9, 337.
11
See Chap. 2, ‘Ranks and Positions.’
12
Elton 2007, 306. Compare Jones 1964, 1:391.
80 D.A. PARNELL
talking about officers who were at some point appointed to senior com-
mand roles, mainly as generals.
Little is known for certain about how officers or even generals spe-
cifically earned appointment in the sixth century.13 An examination of the
generals described in the sixth-century sources does however provide some
clues as to how officers might have gained the emperor’s attention and
earned appointment to high military rank. What is clearest is that there
was no single path to appointment. Aside from their common occupation,
the generals of this period have little in the way of group identity.14 What is
most remarkable is not the similarity of their social, economic, or even eth-
nic origins, but their extreme diversity. By the sixth century, the days when
generals had been drawn primarily from the old nobility of Roman society
were long gone. The term ‘old nobility’ here refers to families with several
generations of men of illustrious rank.15 Few generals of the sixth century
boasted such old and distinguished family backgrounds.16 Of 47 generals
described by Procopius, for example, only two (Liberius and Areobindus)
may be definitively identified as belonging to noble families, although this
does not exclude the possibility that there are others for whom Procopius
did not provide that sort of background information.17 To put this in
perspective, this is the same number of generals who may be definitively
identified as cubicularii, that is palace officials who were frequently
eunuchs from obscure or even servile families (Narses and Scholasticus).18
The number of generals coming from both the old nobility and cubicu-
larii combined are smaller than those generals who could claim descent
from a royal barbarian family. Five of these 47 generals claimed to be
13
Jones 1964, 1:676.
14
Most of the remaining pages of this section originally appeared in Parnell 2012, 4–7.
Reprinted by permission of Boydell & Brewer Ltd., Journal of Medieval Military History,
David Alan Parnell, 2012, 4–7.
15
Of course not all powerful and influential men came from the old nobility. In this sense,
the old nobility was a small subset of the ruling elite. See Jones 1964, 1:529–30 on the
makeup of the illustres in the sixth century and Whately 2013, 50 on defining terms such as
‘elite.’
16
Jones 1964, 1:383, argues that men of high birth were ‘sometimes appointed magistri
with little or no previous military experience,’ but the only example he provides from the
sixth century is Areobindus, who was more likely an exception than a general rule.
17
For Liberius, see Procopius Wars 7.36.6 and PLRE 2: Liberius 3, at 677. For Areobindus,
see Procopius Wars 4.24.1. For a full description of this analysis, see Parnell 2012, 4, n. 14.
18
On cubicularii generally, see Jones 1964, 1:567–70. For Narses and Scholasticus, see
Procopius Wars 1.15.31, 1.25.24 and 7.40.35.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 81
19
Procopius Wars 1.12.11. Among the other four, Mundus claimed to be the son of a
Gepid king (Theophanes Chronicle AM 6032). For a full reconstruction of his career, see
Croke 1982. Mauricius was the son of Mundus (Procopius Wars 5.7.2). Amalafridas was the
grandnephew of Theoderic, king of the Ostrogoths (8.25.11). Finally, Justinian appointed
Suartuas as ruler of the Heruls, but they rejected him and drove him out, at which point
Justinian gave Suartuas a commission as a general (8.25.11). On granting high command to
‘distinguished foreign deserters,’ see Ravegnani 1998, 88.
20
Buzes served as a dux in Syria in 528 and later appeared as a general in Armenia in 540
(Procopius Wars 1.13.5, 2.3.28). Theoctistus served as a dux in Syria in 540 but by 570 was
in North Africa as a general (PLRE 3: Theoctistus 2, at 1226).
21
Procopius states that both Belisarius and Sittas were guardsmen of Justinian when he was
a general (Procopius Wars 1.12.20–21), while he describes Chilbudius as belonging to
Justinian’s household (7.14.1–6).
22
While these men were indeed members of the ruling elite, they were relatives of an
emperor from an obscure family, and so have not been counted as members of the old nobil-
ity. The seven were Germanus, Justinian’s cousin, (Procopius Wars 4.16.1), Justin the son of
Germanus (PLRE 3: Iustinus 4, at 750), Justinian the son of Germanus and brother of Justin
(PLRE 3: Iustinianus 3, at 744), Justus the cousin of Justinian (PLRE 3: Iustus 2, at 758),
Marcellus the nephew of Justinian and brother of Justin II (PLRE 3: Marcellus 5, at 816),
82 D.A. PARNELL
that this was not always just blind nepotism. Family connection could
lead to military command, but did not do so automatically. Germanus,
Justinian’s cousin, was perhaps the most famous non-emperor among
Justinian’s relatives and was quite a competent general. Germanus suc-
cessfully put down the mutiny in North Africa between 536 and 539 with
a combination of diplomacy, placating the soldiers with money, and vic-
tory in battle.23 On the other side of the coin, the future emperor Justin
II (r. 565–578), although a nephew of Justinian, was never favored with
a general’s command, possibly because he did not have military skills.24
Even for those members of the imperial family who did manage to become
generals, they did at least sometimes have to progress through the ranks,
starting as junior officers, before they worked their way up to the high-
est levels of command. For example, Justin, the son of Justinian’s cousin
Germanus, first entered the limelight by helping to reveal the plot of
Artabanes against the emperor in 549, then served as a commander under
a different general in 551, and does not appear to have become a general
with his own command until 557.25
One more curious factor might have helped to gain a general appoint-
ment, depending on the identity of the emperor who was doing the
hiring. If the emperor himself was older, then a general of greater age
might have appealed to him. It has been noted that Justinian gravitated
toward appointing older generals as he himself grew older.26 Indeed, by
550 Justinian was using such elderly generals as Bessas (about 70), Narses
(about 70), and Liberius (about 80). Even Belisarius was aging by this
time (he was about 60 when he was called out of retirement to fight the
Huns in 559). Older men were both within Justinian’s generation and thus
more familiar to him, as well as too old to think about trying to supplant
him. Justinian would have been comfortable with these men holding high
Areobindus who married Praeiecta, the niece of Justinian, and John, the nephew of Vitalian,
who married Justina, the daughter of Germanus (PLRE 3: Ioannes 46). See Chap. 6,
‘Examples of family military service.’ On imperial relatives as generals, cf. Whitby 2000b,
308.
23
Procopius Wars 4.16.1–7, 4.17.1–35. For a general assessment of Germanus, see PLRE
2: Germanus 4, at 505.
24
Justin did however receive the high rank of curopalates, indicating that Justinian did not
dislike him (Theophanes Chronicle AM 6051). Justin’s exclusion from military office there-
fore might have been because he was not competent in military matters. For Justin’s career
prior to ascending the throne, see PLRE 3: Iustinus 5, at 754.
25
Procopius Wars 7.32.13–51, 7.40.34–5, and Agathias Histories 4.21.1.
26
Treadgold 1997, 208.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 83
military office. Age however would have been a very situational advantage
in gaining appointment. A young or recently appointed emperor might
prefer younger generals, particularly officers with whom he had worked
before his ascension, while an older emperor near the end of his reign, as
Justinian in the 550s, might prefer older generals.
Therefore, officers hoping for appointment to high military rank, partic-
ularly as a general, needed to do something to get noticed by the emperor.
They need not have a close personal relationship with the emperor before
their appointment, but while having that relationship certainly did not
hurt their chances, it did not guarantee appointment either. Similarly their
ethnic background, socioeconomic status, success in their military career,
and even age could all be factors that might help. There was, however,
no absolute precondition that could be satisfied to guarantee appoint-
ment to high military position. Officers who gained the rank of general
probably did so by manipulating the levers of patronage and power and
exploiting whatever of these advantages they might have had to convince
the emperor and his advisors that they were worthy of that rank. Since
this manipulation occurred behind the scenes, it is difficult to document
and impossible to prove, but we can be relatively certain that patronage
and the use of personal connections like relatives or friends in positions of
authority had something to do with it. The importance of patronage in
gaining office is clear enough in previous Roman history and in other areas
of the sixth-century government such as the civil service.27 It is implied
by the known relationships and previous positions in the careers of army
officers, rather than stated by the sources directly, but that does not mean
it was not important.
27
Jones 1964, 1:391–6; Kelly 2004, 129–37, 158–65.
28
Jones 1964, 1:378–83.
84 D.A. PARNELL
dismissed.29 While the emperors probably had some process by which they
reviewed their generals to determine whether they should keep their cur-
rent positions, we know nothing about that process or about how regu-
larly it occurred. It is clear, however, that the emperors did monitor the
success and behavior of their generals and were prepared to intervene and
terminate their employment if given enough reason. That reason had to
be considered sufficient; because it seems that otherwise the emperors
frequently let their generals get away with a degree of misbehavior. In the
History of the Wars, Procopius rather mournfully announced, ‘Justinian
was accustomed to condone, for the most part, the mistakes of his com-
manders, and consequently they were found very generally to be guilty of
offenses both in private life and against the state.’30 This is a fascinating
accusation that deserves attention. It is probably justified to be skeptical
that the situation was quite as bad as Procopius makes it sound, but the
evidence does indicate that many generals were in fact guilty of offenses.
To see how emperors handled this, it is necessary to review some incidents
where generals either misbehaved or failed at their jobs and see just what
it took to earn some sort of response from the emperor, whether that
response be as little as censure or as great as removal and arrest. These
examples illustrate the review relationship between emperor and general in
this period and perhaps provide some explanation for why Justinian might
have been accustomed to condone misbehavior.
The examination begins in the midst of Procopius’ lengthy account
of the first phase of the Byzantine War against the Ostrogoths in Italy. In
the winter of 537–538, the commander-in-chief of the Byzantine army in
the theatre, Belisarius, received an allegation that his subordinate general,
named Constantine, had stolen a pair of valuable daggers from Presidius,
a wealthy resident of Rome. To right the wrong, Belisarius summoned
Constantine to his presence and ordered him to return the daggers.
When Constantine refused, Belisarius called guards to have him arrested
and taken into custody. Constantine allegedly panicked and attempted
to stab Belisarius, but was subdued by the guards.31 Now Belisarius had
to decide what to do with Constantine, who was apparently guilty not
only of theft but also of disobedience. Procopius says that sometime later,
Belisarius had Constantine executed for these misbehaviors. The situa-
29
See Jones 1964, 1:380–2 and Parnell 2012, 7–9.
30
Procopius Wars 8.13.14.
31
Procopius Wars 6.8.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 85
tion was however considerably more complicated than this brief survey in
the History of the Wars suggests. From Procopius’ Secret History, we learn
about the complex social situation lying just below the surface of these
events. The year before, Belisarius had discovered that his wife Antonina
was cheating on him. To make the matter even more scandalous, Antonina
was having an affair with their adopted son, Theodosius. When Belisarius
found out about the affair, he forgave Antonina and sent away their son.
Constantine had supported Belisarius throughout the whole matter, even
going so far as to say ‘I would sooner have done away with the wife than
with the young man.’32 Unfortunately for Constantine, Belisarius had
decided to stay with his wife. These events are relevant to the execution
of Constantine. According to Procopius, Belisarius had Constantine exe-
cuted on the suggestion of his wife Antonina, who gleefully took revenge
on Constantine for daring to suggest that Belisarius should have cast her
aside after the affair. Procopius states flatly that this execution, because of
the reason behind it, was ‘the only unholy deed done by Belisarius’ and
that because of it, ‘Belisarius earned the hatred of both the emperor and
all the best men among the Romans.’33 If Procopius is to be believed,
report of Belisarius’ actions and even the reasons for his actions reached
the ear of the emperor. Justinian evidently disapproved and it is possible
that Procopius’ words ‘earned the hatred’ might even imply that Belisarius
received some sort of formal rebuke or censure. However, it is clear that
no significant punishment was forthcoming. Perhaps Belisarius was too
important to the war effort in Italy to recall to Constantinople for more
significant punishment. In fact, far from being punished, Belisarius was
reconfirmed in his position as early as the next year. When Belisarius quar-
reled with other commanders in early 539, which might have provided
an ideal excuse to recall and punish him for an act that supposedly all dis-
approved, Justinian instead recalled the argumentative commanders and
reconfirmed Belisarius as commander-in-chief of the Ostrogothic War.34
So in this case, a general allegedly committed murder or at best improperly
executed a subordinate and earned imperial displeasure but did not actu-
ally receive significant punishment.
32
Procopius Secret History 1.24.
33
Procopius Wars 6.8, Secret History 1.30.
34
Procopius Wars 6.22.4. For a detailed analysis of Belisarius’ squabble with other com-
manders in 538–9, see Chap. 5, ‘Belisarius and Narses in Italy, 538–539.’
86 D.A. PARNELL
35
Procopius Wars 7.17.9–25, 20.1.
36
Procopius Wars 7.20.16–21.
37
Procopius Wars 8.12.29–35.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 87
misbehavior took place in Italy, comparatively far off from the point of
view of the emperor in Constantinople. Misbehavior closer to home might
have registered as more of a concern; misbehavior in Italy was evidently
not a high priority.
The apparent disinterest of Justinian in handling military misbehavior
in Italy was probably continued by his successors in the late sixth century.
Evidence of this can be found in the fact that citizens of the empire began
to direct their complaints about the criminal behavior of generals in other
directions. Thanks to the extensive papal registers of Gregory the Great (r.
590–604), we know that the pope began to deal with many such complaints
by the end of the sixth century. In fact there is a noticeable change over the
course of the papacy of Gregory in papal confidence towards handling the
misbehavior of Byzantine military officers. At the beginning of his papacy,
Gregory was tentative in asking for justice from high-ranking military offi-
cers. In July 591, less than a year after becoming pope, Gregory wrote
to Gennadius, the exarch of Africa.38 He wrote to warn Gennadius that
Theodore, the duke of Sardinia, was misbehaving and implored Gennadius
to bring Theodore to heel. Gregory wrote: ‘So that the grace of Christ
protects your Glory with prosperity, whatever wrongdoings you know are
being committed, check them with a swift prohibition.’ He continued:
Marinianus, our brother and fellow bishop of the city of Porto Torres, has
informed us tearfully that the poor of his city are totally distraught and badly
hit by the cost of commodities. Furthermore even religious members of his
church are enduring heavy molestation and suffering bodily injuries at the
hands of the men of Theodore, their military commander. It has reached
such a point, he says, that they are being thrown into prison, dreadful to
relate. Indeed, even in cases concerning his church, he is being seriously
impeded himself by the aforesaid glorious gentleman.39
38
Gregory Epistle 1.59.
39
Gregory Epistle 1.59, translated by Martyn 2004.
88 D.A. PARNELL
Therefore I beg you, with the Lord inspiring you, to correct all of these
abuses with the threat of your intervention. Do this in such a way that the
glorious Theodore and his men abstain from such actions, if not through
the contemplation of righteousness, at least through fear of your command,
so that justice can flower with liberty in the regions entrusted to you, which
may add to your glory and reward.
40
Gregory Epistle 14.10.
41
Gregory Epistle 14.10, translated by Martyn 2004.
42
There are other letters in which Gregory addresses misbehavior of Byzantine officers.
See Gregory Epistle 1.47, 9.27, 10.5.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 89
43
Procopius Wars 4.26.
44
Procopius Wars 4.27.11–28.41.
45
Procopius Wars 7.31.6.
46
Procopius Wars 7.31.2–15.
90 D.A. PARNELL
47
Procopius Wars 7.32.
48
Procopius Wars 7.32.51.
49
Greatrex 1997, 79.
50
Procopius Wars 4.9. See also Lee 2007b, 399. On triumphs generally, see McCormick
1986. Börm 2013 has argued that this triumph primarily exalted Justinian and actually
served to put Belisarius in his place rather than to reward him.
51
Procopius Wars 6.29.1–4.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 91
Belisarius was quite unwilling to assume the ruling power against the will of
the emperor; for he had an extraordinary loathing for the name of tyrant,
and furthermore he had, in fact, been bound by the emperor previously by
most solemn oaths never during his lifetime to organize a revolution.53
This had all been a ploy to convince the Ostrogoths to surrender. But of
course, the ploy did not go unnoticed. Belisarius’ enemies within the army
immediately reported it to Justinian, accusing Belisarius of attempted
usurpation.54 Justinian acted cautiously, aware of Belisarius’ previous loy-
alty, record of success, and immense popularity. The emperor did not pun-
ish Belisarius directly, perhaps buying Belisarius’ explanation that it had all
been a ruse. But Justinian was concerned enough by this behavior that he
denied Belisarius, victor in this war, public recognition or praise. Instead
of a public triumph, as he had received after the conquest of the Vandal
Kingdom, the wealth of the Ostrogothic treasury which Belisarius had
captured was shown privately to the senate.55 Justinian was likely seeking
to manage Belisarius’ reputation and keep his popularity from swelling yet
further because of his grave concern over this seemingly close call with
rebellion.56
Another indication of Justinian’s concern with this action is the com-
mand situation in Italy after Belisarius left. Justinian was so paranoid that
another general would follow in Belisarius’ footsteps—in earnest instead
of merely as a ruse—that he refused to appoint one commander-in-chief,
instead giving equal power to multiple generals. The result was disaster, or
as Procopius says, ‘many blunders were committed and the entire fabric of
the Roman power was utterly destroyed in a short space of time.’57 Even
after being informed that the generals were quarreling among themselves
and losing battles, Justinian was unwilling to appoint one single general,
52
Procopius Wars 6.29.17–41, 30.25–30.
53
Procopius Wars 6.29.19–20, translated by Dewing 1914, 4:131.
54
Procopius Wars 6.30.1.
55
Procopius Wars 7.1.1–3.
56
Procopius Wars 7.1.4–7. See also Lee 2007a, 68–9.
57
Procopius Wars 7.1.23–24.
92 D.A. PARNELL
64
See Elton 2007, 308, who notes that for generals it was ‘possible to have wide-ranging
careers.’
65
For Belisarius, see Procopius Wars 3.11.1–21. For Vitalius, see 7.10.2.
66
See Parnell 2012, 15–16.
94 D.A. PARNELL
against the Persians in Mesopotamia in 531, then from 535 to 546 in Italy
against the Ostrogoths, and still later served again on the eastern front,
this time in the Caucasus, from 550 to 554.67 The general Martin served
on the eastern front in Mesopotamia in 531, fought in the invasion of
Vandalic North Africa, 533–536, served in Italy, 536–540, served again in
Mesopotamia, 543–544, and ended his career fighting against the Persians
in the Caucasus, 551–556.68 It is not unreasonable to suspect that many
other generals in the period experienced similar movement. Although the
available sources may not provide details, it is probable that many officers
may have served in additional theaters with little to no action and would
not have attracted the attention of contemporary historians, who generally
liked to record important events rather than mundane ones.
Of course, not all movements happened for the same reason. Sometimes
the change was a simple transfer engineered to move an officer to a
theater where the emperor particularly needed him. The movement of
Mundus shows how this would have worked. He was General of Illyricum,
529–530, was transferred and briefly served as General of the East in 531,
but by 532 was back in the Balkans as General of Illyricum again. These
rapid movements were not promotions or demotions, as the rank in each
position was the same, but were prompted by the need to fill the office
in the East when Belisarius was temporarily relieved of it.69 Most move-
ments for generals were these simple transfers, which did not alter their
rank but merely assigned them to another theater of war. Such transfers
were a normal part of service for sixth-century generals. On other occa-
sions, a change in office would be a promotion to a more important post.
For example, Aratius served as a duke in Palestine in the 530s, but was
probably promoted to general when he was sent to Italy to join Belisarius
in 538.70 Similarly, Constantianus was a commander—the count of the
sacred stables (the comes sacri stabuli)—in Italy (536–544), but when
sent out with an army to oppose the Gepids and Heruls in the Balkans
in 549, he was promoted to general.71 Promotions could obviously also
occur within the same theater and so would not necessarily require a
67
For Bessas’ career generally, see PLRE 2: Bessas.
68
For Martin’s career generally, see PLRE 3: Martinus 2.
69
PLRE 3: Mundus, at 903–4.
70
PLRE 3: Aratius, at 103. His rank in Italy is not clear, as is often the case with narrative
sources like Procopius, but even if he was a mid-level commander, this still represented a
promotion from a command position like dux in the limitanei.
71
PLRE 3: Constantianus 2, at 334–6.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 95
72
PLRE 3: Sergius 4. Other examples abound: Buzes was promoted from dux to magister
militum in Mesopotamia in the late 530s (PLRE 3: Buzes, at 254–5), and Artabanes was
promoted from commander to magister militum in Africa in the 540s (see above).
73
For Artabanes, Bessas and Belisarius, see the previous section of this chapter, ‘Review:
Keeping a Position.’
74
Narses was recalled after his rivalry with Belisarius caused the sack of Milan in 539
(Procopius Wars 6.22.4). Buzes was recalled with Belisarius in 542 after they insulted
Justinian while he lay ill with the plague (Secret History 4.1–12). Martin was recalled from
the Caucasus in 556 after he was implicated in the murder of Gubazes, a Lazian king
(Agathias Histories 4.21.1–3).
96 D.A. PARNELL
Sicily as part of the final push against Totila and the Ostrogoths.75 So
not only did Artabanes recover from disgrace, he even regained high mil-
itary command. Belisarius similarly enjoyed a return to military power
after his own downfall. After about 18 months of disgrace, Belisarius was
restored to imperial favor and given another command back in Italy in
544.76 Even Bessas, after accusations that he profiteered in Rome and after
being blamed for losing the city to the Goths in 546, again received a
major appointment, as the General of Armenia in 550. Perhaps all these
instances of second chances, even after serious offenses, are evidence that
Justinian was more generous and forgiving than historians have typically
imagined. After all, we are conditioned to think of a Justinian who is jeal-
ous of the fame of others and insecure about his hold on the throne. This
view of course started with Procopius’ scathing character assassination
of the emperor in the Secret History but has lived on into the twentieth
century through some modern scholars like Charles Diehl, who wrote
of Justinian’s ‘weak will, childish vanity, jealous disposition and fussy
activity.’77 Justinian was a parvenu to the old nobility, unpopular with the
citizens of Constantinople, and so jealous of Belisarius that he denied him
public recognition after the capture of Ravenna and seeming end of the
Ostrogothic War in 540. And yet this same emperor repeatedly welcomed
back into positions of trust and power generals who had plotted against
him in some way. It is fair to say that these second chances are evidence
of a side of Justinian’s character that is not frequently noticed by modern
historians. On the other hand, these second chances may merely reflect
that Justinian, like many people, wanted to stick with what was comfort-
able for him rather than try someone new. Even if Artabanes and Belisarius
had slipped in some way, Justinian had other evidence of their loyalty to
him and Belisarius at least had worked for the emperor for more than a
decade. As long as he felt he could trust them, the emperor seems to have
preferred to appoint tried and true veterans as generals, regardless of their
prior misbehaviors.
75
Procopius Wars 7.39.8.
76
Procopius Wars 7.9.23, Secret History 4.38–39.
77
Examples of Procopius’ character assassination may be found in Procopius Secret History
8.22–33 as well as in the historian’s description of the Nika Riot (Procopius Wars
1.24.32–38). See also Diehl 1913, 3.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 97
78
Procopius Secret History 5.28–32.
98 D.A. PARNELL
for the vast majority of their reign, like Justinian and his nephew Justin
II, probably, with reason, feared a military coup more than an emperor
of considerable military experience, like Maurice.83 That Maurice, the
emperor with the most military experience and closest connection to the
army since Zeno (r. 474–491), was the emperor overthrown by a military
coup is an interesting anomaly. Military experience was certainly not a
guarantee of protection from a military coup; however civilian emperors
are likely to have been more nervous about them because of their lack of
significant military experience. For Justinian and his immediate successors,
the combination of the threat of a military leader, and the separation and
independence that military leader in the West had, would be intimidating
indeed. It might explain why the emperors would allow more leeway as far
as misbehavior among top military officers in the West. After all, keeping
them loyal and avoiding attempts at usurpation was much more important
for the emperor than ensuring that they behaved well or even succeeded
at their jobs.
Knowing that these were the priorities of the emperor, generals not sur-
prisingly aligned their own goals accordingly. While Procopius records fre-
quent moralizing on the part of Belisarius, these attempts to ensure good
behavior were aimed at the rank and file soldiers.84 Whenever Belisarius
scolded his officers, he focused less on ethical behavior than on trying
to urge them to follow the military hierarchy or, in other words, to be
loyal to him and obey his commands.85 In this, Belisarius and presum-
ably other senior generals were imitating the emperor’s prioritization of
loyalty. In his own life, Belisarius showed little concern with maintaining
good behavior and in fact engaged in activities for which he surely would
have excoriated his subordinates. In addition to the improper execution of
Constantine, Procopius alleges that Belisarius knowingly retreated during
the Persian war when he knew it was disadvantageous for the army because
he needed to go see his wife.86 He was also apparently corrupt. Procopius
83
On the significance of the non-military emperors of the fifth and sixth centuries who
stayed in Constantinople for most of their reigns and the difficulties this imposed on their
relationship with their armies, see Lee 2007a, 30–37.
84
Procopius Wars 3.12.8–22, 4.4.1–8, 5.10.30–37. See Chap. 7 for more analysis of these
speeches.
85
Procopius Wars 2.18.6, 6.18. See Chap. 5 for more on these exhortations and the need
for generals to gather consensus from their officers.
86
Procopius Secret History 2.18–25. See also Chap. 6, ‘Wives and Children of Justinian’s
Men.’
100 D.A. PARNELL
accuses him of seizing some of the Vandal treasure for himself before turn-
ing the rest of it over to Justinian.87 Like the emperors, senior military
officers did not highly prioritize good behavior. For the officers, maintain-
ing their own position for as long as possible was of significantly greater
import than behavior. By staying in place as long as possible, officers maxi-
mized their benefits in terms of pay and increased reputation. So how
could a general maintain his position as long as possible? He could first
pay attention to the expectation for him that was highest on the emperor’s
list of priorities: the first goal for a senior military officer was to convince
the emperor that they were no threat to him and were in fact intensely
loyal. By remaining on good terms with the emperor, they would ensure
that they were not prematurely removed from position because of the
emperor’s concern over their loyalty or lack thereof. Secondly, generals
sought to gain as many resources as possible in terms of soldiers and cash
to pay the soldiers, in order to keep getting the job done. For example,
Procopius recognized the importance of a general securing the necessary
resources by praising Narses for obtaining from Justinian ‘money and men
and arms in quantities worthy of the Roman Empire.’88 By gaining these
resources, generals would give themselves the best possible chance to do
well in their position by winning battles and even entire wars, thus bur-
nishing their reputations in society.
In the first half of his career, Belisarius was a master of this strategy.
He cultivated a reputation as supremely loyal to Justinian, emphasized by
his key role in quashing the Nika Riot.89 He apparently further eased the
emperor’s concerns by formally swearing never to rebel against him.90 He
was capable of fighting masterfully with a smaller army, but took every
opportunity to request reinforcements and money, leaning heavily on his
personal relationship with Justinian and the writing skills of his secretary,
Procopius. His letters to the emperor during his Italian campaigns were
almost always requests for additional resources.91 Belisarius parlayed the
trust of Justinian and the use of these resources into key victories that
burnished his reputation and made him the envy of the Byzantine world.92
His downfall was due not to his many ethical flaws such as his weakness
87
Procopius Secret History 1.19, 4.17.
88
Procopius Wars 8.26.7–10.
89
Procopius Wars 1.24.40–58.
90
Procopius Wars 6.29.19–20.
91
Procopius Wars 5.24.1–17, 7.12.3–10.
92
Procopius Wars 7.1.4–15.
OFFICERS AND THEIR EMPEROR 101
While the connection between an officer of the Byzantine army and his
emperor was the relationship most critical to his success, the relationship
he had with his fellow officers was a close second in importance.1 Generals,
in particular, needed trusted officers to run the army efficiently. These sub-
ordinate officers supported the opinions of their general in war councils
with other generals and served as confidants for carrying out sensitive mis-
sions. Especially in situations where the official military hierarchy might
be unclear or contested, personal relationships with trusted subordinates
enabled the general to maintain control of the army. That an officer might
be a general’s official subordinate in the army hierarchy did not automati-
cally make him a confidant of the general. Instead, these critical relation-
ships were social choices that seem to have involved quite a bit of personal
preference. It is fair to label the web of such relationships among officers
‘social networks’ (informal associations of individuals who share a certain
degree of group feeling).2 This appellation invokes the terminology of
social network analysis, a branch of sociology that is used to analyze the
1
The majority of this chapter originally appeared as Parnell 2015a. Copyright (c) 2015
Johns Hopkins University Press. This article was first published in Journal of Late Antiquity
8:1 (2015), 114–135. Reprinted with permission by Johns Hopkins University Press.
2
Scott 2000, 20.
at this time cannot be overstated, but that importance does not neces-
sarily mean that the sources refer to them openly and frequently. The
Strategikon refers to social networks somewhat delicately and indirectly by
warning a general to be ‘prudent in counsel and courteous to his associ-
ates,’ presumably because that was necessary to maintain the support of
those associates.8 The historians of the sixth century offer more direct
confirmation that social networks existed in the Byzantine army. Agathias
confirms their existence while bemoaning the state of the army in Lazica
in the Caucasus in the 550s:
But in the absence of any general of note and of any outstanding and
authoritative personality everyone was practically on terms of equality. The
result was mutual recrimination and mutual exhortation, with each man
having ears only for his own suggestions, and nothing worthwhile was
accomplished. The fact that opinion was divided, so that one view found
favor with one group whilst some other view appealed to the opposing
faction, meant that neither policy was put into practice. Resentful that his
own point of view did not win general acceptance each man went about his
business in a negligent and half-hearted fashion and took pleasure rather in
any reverses which might furnish him later with the opportunity of boasting
to the next man and of not mincing his words as he pointed out that the
sole cause of the unfortunate event had been their failure to implement his
suggestions.9
Here the ‘groups’ and ‘factions’ of Agathias are social networks organized
by influential officers to support their policies. The problem faced by this
particular army was that no single officer (a ‘general of note’) had been
able to construct a large enough social network to succeed in imposing his
strategy on the whole army. The result was chaos and failure.
While this evidence from the Strategikon and Agathias is tantalizing,
more conclusive proof for the existence of relationships between officers
and therefore social networks in the Byzantine military comes from close
analysis of Procopius of Caesarea. As mentioned in the Introduction,
Procopius is a source to be utilized with care because his close proxim-
8
Maurice Strategikon 8.2.97, translated by Dennis 1984, 91. Centuries later, Leo VI gave
generals similar advice, encouraging them to attract the respect of their officers (Leo Taktika
2.10, translated by Dennis 2010, 21. See also Haldon 1999, 231).
9
Agathias Histories 4.16.9–10, translated by Frendo 1975, 118. Compare Procopius Wars
7.1.16–24.
106 D.A. PARNELL
ity to the important officers of the period makes it likely that his account
is biased in favor of those he knew best. However, this proximity also
makes him the best source for identifying personal relationships. Analysis
of the evidence presented by Procopius makes it possible to begin map-
ping out the social networks of the Byzantine army and the way those
networks were used to secure influence and authority. One starting point
in this analysis is to determine which officers worked together frequently
over the course of their careers. For example, it is interesting that the
general Valerian served with Belisarius in four different campaigns spread
across fifteen years. Valerian was with Belisarius in North Africa in 533, in
Belisarius’ first campaign in Italy starting in 537, in the East in 541, and
finally also in his second campaign in Italy in 548.10 This sort of evidence
by itself does not necessarily prove that the two officers were friends, but
the frequency with which they worked together is a starting point for
positing the existence of some kind of social network containing both
Valerian and Belisarius. Further analysis makes it possible to understand
the nature of their cooperation and the personal relationship that might
have been behind that cooperation, and then to expand out from this pair
to find their other associates and reconstruct a larger and more complex
network.
Unfortunately, sketching out complete social networks, even for a lim-
ited time period, is not possible. The sources of the sixth century tend to
focus primarily on the exploits or failures of the great generals as a plot
device, to provide a protagonist for readers to follow.11 The result of this
narrative construction is that the sources simply do not record sufficient
information about all of the other officers that made up social networks.
While it is possible to identify some members of a network, and to exclude
some antagonistic officers from it, constructing the complete social net-
work of Belisarius, for example, is not. To form as complete an image of
these networks as possible, it is necessary to analyze extended narrative
sequences, which are the only parts of these sources that provide sufficient
detail for at least partial reconstruction of networks. Procopius’ account
of Belisarius’ first campaign against the Ostrogoths (535–540) is both
10
North Africa (Procopius Wars 3.11.5–6), Italy in 537–540 (5.24.18), the East in 541
(2.14.8), and Italy in 548 (7.27.3, 7.30.1–2).
11
In the Gothic War, Procopius builds a narrative around praising as a heroic protagonist
first Belisarius, then Totila, and finally Narses (Treadgold 2007, 204). Agathias builds up
Narses as the protagonist of the first part of his narrative (Agathias Histories 2.9).
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 107
lengthy and detailed and therefore provides a good setting for examining
the existence and significance of social networks in the Byzantine army.12
Of particular interest are the difficulties Belisarius faced in attempting
to control the army between 538 and 539. These problems are worth
recounting because they shed light on the existence of networks that
might have remained hidden in the background but for the scale of the
disruption to military operations to which they contributed.
with the strategy behind the order. The Ostrogoths soon besieged
Ariminum with John and his cavalry trapped inside. Procopius alleges
that John made a speech to the troops in which he blasted Belisarius and
accused him of neglect.20 About this same time, further reinforcements
in the form of 7000 soldiers landed in Picenum under the command of
Narses the Eunuch. With Narses, in command of this force were the gen-
eral Justin, and the commanders Aratius and another Narses (no relation
to the eunuch), who were brothers.21
Belisarius and Narses the Eunuch joined forces at Firmum (modern
Fermo) and held a conference of officers to discuss whether the army
should go to the rescue of John in Ariminum.22 That this conference took
place at all is interesting and the course of the meeting suggests that all
opinions mattered. According to Procopius, the majority of officers pres-
ent did not want to rescue John, because they believed he had made his
decision out of avarice and because ‘he would not allow the operations
of the war to be carried out in due order nor in the manner prescribed
by Belisarius.’23 In other words, they were hostile to John because he
challenged the authority of Belisarius. These officers, while unnamed,
no doubt represent Belisarius’ friends and allies, or the social network
upon which he could rely. These men supported Belisarius and derived
their importance and power within the army from that relationship. These
unnamed officers may also serve as a mouthpiece for Procopius to voice
his own outrage at the situation, but just because Procopius was outraged
does not mean that officers in the army were not upset as well. It is also
important to note that Procopius makes clear that a majority, not all, of
the officers present felt this way about John. This admission foreshadows
subsequent evidence for a social network of John and Narses in opposition
to Belisarius.
20
Procopius Wars 6.12.17.
21
Procopius Wars 6.13.16–18.
22
Procopius Wars 6.16.1–24. Procopius summarizes the conference with a few brief
speeches mostly devoid of technical content, but this is probably because he wishes to present
a neatly classicized narrative (Cameron 1985, 37). It is likely that the conference included
technical discussion of how to actually accomplish the goals about which the generals argued.
Compare with the meetings of Charlemagne and his military advisers described by Bachrach
2002, 318–51.
23
Procopius Wars 6.16.4. Presumably avarice referred to the opportunity of a general
commanding a garrison to extort money from the city’s inhabitants. For a contemporary
example, see Bessas at Rome in 545–6 (7.17.9–14).
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 109
24
Procopius Wars 6.16.9–10, translated by Dewing 1914, 4:5–7.
25
This rhetorical strategy also served to conceal Narses’ personal affection for John
(Procopius Wars 6.16.5).
26
Procopius Wars 6.16.15–16.
27
Procopius Wars 6.16.17–24.
28
Procopius Wars 6.16.21–3.
110 D.A. PARNELL
personnel shifted the focus back to Belisarius and his network, perhaps a
deliberate balancing act since the rescue mission itself had been Narses’
idea. Although the rescue was a success, John refused to thank Ildiger
and by extension Belisarius, Ildiger’s superior and relation by marriage.
Instead, John asserted that he only owed a debt for his rescue to Narses.
This declaration of loyalty to Narses was therefore also a rejection and
humiliation of Belisarius.29 These events fanned the flames of resentment
between the officers.
The rivalry between Belisarius and Narses crippled the war effort in
Italy, and also revealed two different social networks. Another conference
of officers in late 538 failed to produce agreement on what to do next,
or even who was ultimately in command of the army, after which Narses,
John, and their supporters withdrew from the main army and pursued
their own goals through the end of 538 and into the next year.30 This led
to disaster in early 539. When Belisarius heard that the Byzantine gar-
rison in Milan was under siege by an Ostrogothic army, he dispatched
a relief force. He selected the general Martin, a longtime associate, and
Uliaris, formerly and probably still an officer of his guardsmen, to com-
mand the expedition.31 But when Martin and Uliaris arrived, they halted
and wrote to Belisarius requesting reinforcements before they engaged
the Ostrogoths. According to Procopius, Belisarius ordered John and
Justin, who were nearby, to proceed with all haste to help Martin and
Uliaris at Milan. Continuing John’s earlier insubordination, John and
Justin allegedly replied that they ‘would do nothing except what Narses
commanded.’32 Belisarius was then compelled to write to Narses and to
convince him to order John and Justin to assist Martin and Uliaris.33
The wording of the letter Belisarius wrote to Narses indicates the lack
of control Belisarius had over him. Instead of issuing an order, Belisarius
was reduced to pleading the case and attempting to convince Narses as an
equal. So Belisarius supplied a list of reasons why this order made sense,
including the close proximity of John and Justin to Milan, the greater
distance of Belisarius himself, and the fact that John and Justin could eas-
29
Procopius Wars 6.18.2–3.
30
Procopius Wars 6.18.27–9, 6.19.8–10.
31
Procopius Wars 6.21.1. Belisarius routinely assigned a joint command to a general and
one of his bucellarii. For other examples, see 6.4.6 and Chap. 7, ‘Neutral Descriptions of
Individual Soldiers.’
32
Procopius Wars 6.21.13–16.
33
Procopius Wars 6.21.17–22.
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 111
ily regain their former position after helping at Milan. Earlier, Narses had
crafted a similarly dispassionate argument about the strategic advantages
of relieving John in Ariminum.34 Now, less than a year later, it is striking
that it is Belisarius who is reduced to making such an argument merely to
get an alleged subordinate to do what he wishes. It must be admitted at
this point that Procopius is the only source for this information, and he is
clearly crafting the narrative to favor Belisarius and make Narses and John
look bad.35 While Procopius may have tweaked the specifics of the timing
of the events or the wording of the letter to especially vilify Narses and
John, the very fact that he might have done so further underlines the rift
that had grown between Belisarius and Narses. For the purpose of reveal-
ing the relationships between officers, the existence of this rift and the
connections between the officers are more important than the details of
how exactly their argument caused this problem and who is to blame. For
example, even if it is assumed that Procopius and Belisarius made up much
of this story, and that in reality there were problems because Martin and
Uliaris failed to attack or request reinforcements in time, the fact remains
that Procopius and his patron saw fit to shift blame onto a group of offi-
cers that Belisarius disliked and distrusted. Both scenarios thus essentially
prove the same thing about the existence of competing social networks.
According to Procopius’ version of events, Narses found Belisarius’ let-
ter persuasive and agreed to dispatch John and Justin with their soldiers,
but too much time was lost in the process, and the Ostrogoths captured
Milan in early 539 and massacred all of its male inhabitants.36 As a result
of this disaster, Justinian recalled Narses to Constantinople and recon-
firmed Belisarius as the sole commander-in-chief in Italy.37 Beyond the
recall, Justinian did not further punish Narses, and does not seem to have
punished John or Justin at all. This lack of punishment does not necessar-
ily indicate favoritism, as Procopius explains elsewhere that Justinian fre-
quently condoned mistakes or transgressions in all of his generals.38 While
the recall of Narses and the confirmation of Belisarius’ authority might
seem to have been a win for Belisarius and his network of supporters, the
34
Procopius Wars 6.16.9–10.
35
Compare Cameron 1985: ‘The Wars is pervaded by Procopius’ personal views of people
and events, and however he defined its real purpose to himself, it was from the beginning
inspired by his own strongly held opinions’ (137).
36
Procopius Wars 6.21.23–39.
37
Procopius Wars 6.22.4.
38
Procopius Wars 6.22.4, 8.13.14 and see Chap. 4.
112 D.A. PARNELL
general was not satisfied with the performance of his officers. Belisarius
seems to have at least partially blamed Uliaris, whom he dismissed from
his presence.39 This may hint that the fault did not lie as completely on the
disobedience of John and the general opposition of the social network of
Narses as Procopius wants the reader to believe.
39
Procopius Wars 6.21.42–6.22.3.
40
Kaegi 1981 briefly describes these problems in the Byzantine army in Italy, although he
focuses on the events only as evidence of personal disagreement between the main characters
(50–54).
41
Procopius Wars 6.21.1–15.
42
Procopius Wars 1.21.23–27.
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 113
43
Procopius Wars 3.11.5–6.
44
Procopius Wars 7.1.1 and 2.13.16.
45
General of the East: Procopius Wars 2.24.13. For the career of Martin, see PLRE 3:
Martinus 2.
46
For the career of Uliaris, see PLRE 3: Vliaris 1.
47
See the judgment of PLRE 3: Ildiger, at 615.
48
Procopius Wars 4.15.49.
49
Procopius Wars 6.8.16.
50
Procopius Wars 6.16.21–24.
51
Procopius Wars 7.1.1. For the career of Ildiger, see PLRE 3: Ildiger.
52
Procopius Wars 6.21.1.
114 D.A. PARNELL
and Cyprian, who were both present with the army in Italy during this
time. Valerian, as we have already seen, served with Belisarius in four dif-
ferent campaigns spread across fifteen years, including this campaign in
Italy.53 He was important enough in Italy that when Belisarius was recalled
to Constantinople in 540, he was the third of only four senior officers
that accompanied him.54 Cyprian was a commander with Belisarius in the
invasion of Africa in 533. Belisarius considered him important enough
to select him to accept the surrender of Gelimer, king of the Vandals, in
534. Cyprian then fought with Belisarius in Italy during the general’s first
campaign (535–540) and remained there until his death in 545.55 So if
both Valerian and Cyprian were important allies of Belisarius, why are they
not mentioned frequently in the narrative we just examined? Procopius’
failure to mention Valerian and Cyprian by name probably indicates that
they remained at Belisarius’ side and were not dispatched on missions
during this period.56 In narrative terms, this would keep them in a more
generic plural of officers talking to Belisarius. That Belisarius would do his
best to keep some trusted senior officers close during his tense standoff
with Narses is not surprising. As befits a successful and wealthy general,
Belisarius’ social network was large, but apparently not large enough to
enable him to lead the army without resistance in 538–539.
Turning to the other side of this rivalry, we find the network of Narses
and John to be no less developed. Although Narses was clearly the senior
general in this group, John came in at a close second. John had, after all,
started the problems of 538 on his own before Narses even arrived in Italy.
However, as evidenced by the ire of many officers at the conference of
early 538, John was not popular enough to stand alone against Belisarius.
Despite his skills and length of service, John never overcame this lack of
popularity. Years later, in 551, Justinian apparently considered appoint-
ing John as commander-in-chief in Italy, but demurred because the other
officers in the army would not accept him.57 Because of this problem, John
needed the support of Narses, so it was convenient that Narses was fond of
him.58 In return, John proved to be Narses’ most significant and enduring
53
See note 10 of this chapter.
54
Procopius Wars 7.1.1. To recapitulate, the four senior officers who accompanied
Belisarius were Martin, Ildiger, Valerian, and Herodian (not discussed here).
55
For Cyprian, see PLRE 3: Cyprianus, at 368–70.
56
Cf. PLRE 3: Valerianus 1, at 1357.
57
Instead, Justinian selected Narses (Procopius Wars 8.21.7–9).
58
Procopius Wars 6.16.5.
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 115
59
In 539, after splitting from Belisarius, Narses dispatched John to Caesena (Procopius
Wars 6.19.19). In 552, John joined Narses in commanding the left wing of the army at the
Battle of Busta Gallorum (8.31.2–3). Later in 552, Narses dispatched John into Tuscany to
try to cut off Teias (8.34.21–24).
60
In 552, John advised Narses on techniques for transporting the army across rivers
(Procopius Wars 8.26.24–25). See Rance 2005, 470.
61
Procopius Wars 6.18.6. Narses had the support of the Herul allies as a body, including
their commander. Their personal connection to Narses seems to have been strong. In 539,
when Narses was recalled, the Herul allies refused to serve with Belisarius and left Italy
(6.22.5). On the Heruls, see Chap. 3.
62
Procopius Wars 6.18.6–10.
63
In 538, Narses the Eunuch arrived in Italy with Justin and the other Narses, and Aratius,
who had arrived shortly before, quickly joined them (Procopius Wars 6.13.16–18).
64
Procopius Wars 1.15.31.
65
Procopius Wars 6.21.16.
116 D.A. PARNELL
66
Many important officers might have commanded several hundred bucellarii. Having
more than that would be exceptional, and lower-ranking officers likely had far fewer. See
Schmitt 1994, 162–3.
67
Procopius Wars 6.23.3–5 and 2.19.15.
68
For John’s betrayal and Belisarius’ fall from grace, see Procopius Secret History 4.1–13.
69
Procopius Wars 7.13.21–25, 8.26.13, 8.31.4. For the career of John the Glutton, see
PLRE 3: Ioannes ‘The Glutton’ 64.
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 117
70
Procopius Wars 6.18.4, translated by Dewing 1914, 4:19–21.
71
Procopius Wars 6.29.29. Kaegi 1981 recognized the significance of the selection of
these four officers, connecting it to earlier disagreements between Belisarius and Narses, but
he did not comment upon the inclusion in this list of Bessas, who was not a part of those
previous disagreements (53).
72
Narses the Eunuch was not included in this list because he had already been withdrawn
from Italy by Justinian (in 539).
73
On the beginning of Bessas’ career, see Greatrex 1998a, 74, note 4.
74
Procopius Wars 5.5.2–3.
75
By 550 Bessas was the General of Armenia (magister militum per Armeniam) and had
taken charge of operations against the Persians in Lazica (Procopius Wars 8.9.4).
118 D.A. PARNELL
important officer beyond his own guardsmen. Given Bessas’ later extor-
tion of the citizens of Rome, his goals were possibly focused on enriching
himself rather than on gathering significant support to attempt to control
army operations.76 If Bessas was so focused on wealth, it would not be
surprising that Belisarius would want him out of the way before he entered
Ravenna and captured the Ostrogothic treasury there.
Fig. 5.1 The social networks of the Byzantine army in Italy, 538–539. Note that
only named officers are included. Each network probably included additional offi-
cers not explicitly identified in the sources.
76
Procopius Wars 7.19.13–14, 7.20.1, 26–28.
77
Scott 2000, 10.
78
Compare this figure to those presented by Schor 2011, 44 and 89.
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 119
It is also true that Belisarius and John are regarding each other with sus-
picion, a fact which can be seen from previous events. For the conflict of
men’s judgments, one with the other, is clearly detected by their actions.
This indeed is the reason why they have not even been able to join forces
with each other up to this time. For their mutual suspicion disconcerts each
of them; and those who admit this feeling are bound to harbor envy and
hostility besides. And when these passions assault men, no necessary thing
can be done.79
79
Procopius Wars 7.25.22–24, translated by Dewing 1914, 4:377.
80
Procopius Wars 7.1.22–24, translated by Dewing 1914, 4:157–159, emphasis added.
120 D.A. PARNELL
from the room, but do him no harm out of respect to the officers present.81
This respect for the other officers implies that Belisarius expected them to
be distressed by the punishment of Constantine. Perhaps they would view
harsh punishment as a breach of the camaraderie of their network and the
trust they had in Belisarius. In the Secret History, Procopius announces
that the murder of Constantine on Belisarius’ orders, not long after he was
dragged out of the room, incurred ‘great hostility on the part of all the
Roman notables.’82 This situation indicates that officers valued the rela-
tionships in their social network and that observers could expect officers
to be distressed by problems with them.
Of course, the benefits of these social relationships were not confined to
warm, personal feelings. On a more practical level, membership of a social
network with a powerful general could result in an officer receiving the
necessary backing to maintain their own position, even if they were not
the highest of achievers or broke military regulations. Although Uliaris
had some behavioral problems, particularly carelessness and the propensity
to get drunk too frequently, Belisarius’ protection covered him until the
Milan incident. Likewise, John received the protection of Narses to shield
him during his insubordination toward Belisarius.83 Practical rewards were
to be had for capable and ambitious officers as well. They could ‘ride the
coattails’ of a general with whom they enjoyed social intimacy into greater
responsibility or promotion. The career of Martin skyrocketed after serv-
ing with Belisarius in the East in 531 and accompanying him to North
Africa in 533.84 Even incapable generals might benefit from such connec-
tions. In North Africa, the commander Sergius, ridiculed by Procopius as
an incompetent, used his association with his uncle Solomon to gain pro-
motion to General of Africa and the governorship of the region in 544.85
It is reasonable to expect that generals would be more likely to promote
or recommend for new positions those officers whom they felt were most
loyal to them. So while these networks were critical to the success of the
general, and undoubtedly encouraged by the general, his fellow officers
could also expect substantial benefits from participation.
81
Procopius Wars 6.8.14–17. For more on this episode, see Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a
Position.’
82
Procopius Secret History 1.30.
83
On Uliaris, see note 46 of this chapter. On John, see Procopius Wars 6.21.13–16.
84
See note 45 of this chapter.
85
Procopius Wars 4.22.1–5, Procopius Secret History 5.28–33.
122 D.A. PARNELL
While the situation in Italy in 538–539 is the best example available because
of the detail with which Procopius describes the story, evidence of social
networks clashing and subverting the authority of the official hierarchy can
be found elsewhere in the reign of Justinian. When Belisarius returned to
the East to wage war with the Persians in 541, he found another struggle
with a rival officer backed by a social network. His principal antagonist on
this front was Peter the General, a Persian captured by the emperor Justin I
as a boy and later promoted to high military command.86 In 541, Peter was
ostensibly a subordinate commander under Belisarius, but sought to under-
mine Belisarius whenever possible. When many officers grumbled against
Belisarius’ plans to encamp some distance from Nisibis, he was compelled to
call together a conference of officers and explain his plans, much as he had
done in Italy. He complained to the officers, ‘the majority of you are allow-
ing yourselves to act in a most disorderly manner, and each one wishes to
be himself supreme commander in the war.’87 After this harangue, Belisarius
explained the reason for his choice of location. While Procopius announces
that Belisarius convinced many with this speech, he did not convince enough.
Peter, along with another John, the commander of a contingent of soldiers
from Mesopotamia, removed himself and his supporters from the army and
camped in a different location, closer to Nisibis.88 The disagreement and fis-
sure in the army led to defeat in an ensuing battle with the Persians.
The whole episode is recounted in considerably less detail than the
Italian incident, probably because Procopius was not himself present for
these events as he had been in Italy.89 Some sense of the scale of difference
in detail between the two incidents may be grasped in that, although both
periods are approximately equal chronologically, Procopius spends twice
as many chapters describing the situation in Italy as he does the situation
in the East.90 Nevertheless, despite the relative lack of detail, it is fairly clear
86
On the career of Peter the General, see PLRE 2: Petrus 27, at 870. He had been a gen-
eral since at least 528 (Joh. Mal. 18.4).
87
Procopius Wars 2.18.6.
88
Procopius Wars 2.18.16.
89
Procopius likely left Belisarius’ service in 540 to begin writing (Treadgold 2007, 184).
90
Procopius describes the events in Italy between spring 538 and spring 539 in 14 chapters
(Procopius Wars 6.7–21) and the events in the East between spring 541 and summer 542 in
only seven chapters (2.14–21).
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 123
that similar factors were at play in the East as those we have observed in
Italy. A personal rivalry between Belisarius and Peter was complicated by
the fact that each had his own social network and could not exert author-
ity over the supporters of the other man. As in Italy, it would require
imperial intervention to break the stalemate and reestablish more unified
command and control. In 542, as Justinian lay ill with the plague, Peter
and John the Glutton, erstwhile a trusted officer of Belisarius’ guardsmen,
leaked word that Belisarius had engaged in discussion with other officers
about the succession if Justinian should die.91 This was enough to cause
Belisarius’ recall to Constantinople and a temporary disgrace. Peter, how-
ever, remained in the East in his position.92 This chain of events indicates
that both Belisarius and Peter had their own networks of supporters and
that John the Glutton ‘defected’ to Peter’s network. While there is not
enough detail to identify the other participants in each network, we can be
fairly certain that there were others based on the discussions at the confer-
ence and Peter’s actions thereafter.
While the information he provides tends to be about Belisarius and his
struggles, Procopius occasionally offers a glimpse of other generals engag-
ing in the creation and manipulation of social networks. The Byzantine
army in North Africa was rife with factionalism and conflict. This led to
the creation of a social network of officers that completely separated from
the Byzantine military establishment in a mutiny, started in 536 under
the leadership of Stotzas. This network managed to remain indepen-
dent and intact despite being a target of the Byzantine army until the
death of Stotzas in battle in 545.93 The degree of group feeling and the
strength of the relationships within that group required to keep a muti-
nous army operating without any official support for nine years must have
been considerable. Even the officers that stayed within the official mili-
tary, however, were divided into competing social networks centered on
prominent generals. The most significant division developed in 544–545
between the followers of the governor and general Sergius and those of
the commander John, the son of Sisiniolus.94 Procopius despised Sergius,
91
Procopius Secret History 4.1–16. For more on Belisarius’ relationship with Justinian, see
Chap. 4.
92
Procopius Wars 2.24.13.
93
Procopius Wars 4.14.7–42, 4.24.9–15.
94
Sergius was Praetorian Prefect of Africa and magister militum (PLRE 3: Sergius 4, at 1124).
John probably ranked as a mid-level commander (comes rei militaris), but may have been a
magister militum (PLRE 3: Ioannes 27, at 640). On ranks in the Byzantine army, see Chap. 2.
124 D.A. PARNELL
95
Procopius Secret History 5.32.
96
Procopius Wars 4.22.4.
97
Procopius Wars 4.24.1–16.
98
Procopius describes these events in Africa between spring 544 and spring 545 in just
three chapters (Procopius Wars 4.21–24), compared to the 14 chapters he devoted to the
chronologically similar period in Italy (6.7–21).
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 125
Having reviewed the evidence for the existence of social networks in the
sixth-century Byzantine army, it is reasonable to acknowledge that they
were not unique to the century. Networks, or ‘factions,’ as they are some-
times called probably existed at all times in the history of the Roman army.
Ammianus Marcellinus, the fourth-century Roman historian and soldier,
described the existence of ‘turbulent factions’ in 363 as the army prepared
to acclaim a new emperor.100 He named two officers in each of two factions.
While the circumstances were unusual (the selection of an emperor) rather
than the more mundane day-to-day operation of the army, these networks
had most likely already existed before this moment. Ammianus also com-
plained that ‘a few hot-headed soldiers’ proclaimed Jovian as emperor,
whom neither of the two networks he had just introduced were consider-
ing.101 This probably indicates that there was at least one more identifiable
social network at the time, bringing the total to three. So social networks
were not new to the Roman army in the sixth century. Procopius, in light
of his classical education, was probably aware of the networks organized
by the Athenian commanders during the invasion of Sicily, 415–413
B.C. Thucydides described the conflict between Nicias, Alcibiades, and
Lamachus over how the invasion should proceed.102 Procopius may even
have been inspired by the way Thucydides described the problem and this
may have influenced the language he used in reporting the clashes of social
networks in the History of the Wars.
Although social networks were not new to the sixth century, they seem
to have had a significant importance at times during this period. It is
worth considering why this phenomenon was so pronounced in Justinian’s
reign in particular. Even though this system worked under the right
circumstances, it probably would not have been considered ideal from the
99
Scott 2000, 10–11.
100
Ammianus 25.5.2.
101
Ammianus 25.5.4.
102
Thucydides 6.46–50. See also Kagan 1981, 217.
126 D.A. PARNELL
and restraint as his rule experienced setbacks.107 This caution might have
included limiting the authority of senior army officers. Because of these
concerns, the prospect that Justinian actively encouraged rivalry among his
generals and refused to clarify a hierarchy in order to ensure his own security
is not beyond the realm of possibility; that he at least tolerated considerable
dissension is even more likely.108 It is worth remembering that Justinian
did not punish Narses or John for their resistance to Belisarius in 538–539,
even though he did confirm Belisarius as commander-in-chief, which
would seem to imply that any resistance against him should have been con-
sidered mutinous and improper.109 There is perhaps no greater indication
of Justinian’s toleration of dissent among his military commanders than
the fact that he failed to appoint a commander-in-chief for the Italian the-
ater after Belisarius returned to Constantinople in 540. This choice is not
surprising given the context. Belisarius had just captured Ravenna under
the pretense that he would revolt against Justinian and claim the imperial
title in the Italy.110 While Belisarius did not actually do this, the knowledge
of it must have woken all of Justinian’s fears of military revolt. So instead of
appointing one commanding general to replace Belisarius in Italy, Justinian
gave multiple generals equal authority to wrap up the war. Even when
this unusual arrangement resulted in battles being lost, Justinian merely
rebuked the generals involved. The emperor did not consent to appoint
a single commander-in-chief until 542, by which time the Byzantines had
lost the upper hand in the war.111 This sequence, and the scenes that played
out in the years before it, show that without unequivocal authority either
from their rank or from the direct support of the emperor, generals would
have had no choice other than to try to muster that authority through such
networks as have been described in this chapter.
A final possible explanation for the creation of these networks is purely
social. The personalities of the individual officers involved and the group
107
Meier has argued for a change in Justinian’s reign after the arrival of the plague and
other setbacks that made the emperor recognize his own limitations and become pensive
about the future. See Meier 2004.
108
Several scholars have argued that dissension among generals in the Byzantine military
reached its peak in this period. See Kaegi 2007, 255 and Lee 2004, 125. Whitby 2000a notes
that this sort of dissension was not limited to Belisarius, but was also experienced by other
generals of the period (474).
109
Procopius Wars 6.22.4.
110
Procopius Wars 6.29.17–41.
111
Procopius Wars 7.1.23–24, 7.3.1, 7.6.9.
128 D.A. PARNELL
112
Procopius Secret History 1.24.
113
Procopius Wars 4.4.22–24.
114
Procopius Wars 2.3.26.
115
Procopius Wars 6.16.4–5.
THE SOCIAL NETWORKS OF OFFICERS 129
als held war conferences to attempt to win them over to their points of
view. The existence of these social networks is evident in the way generals
like Belisarius and Narses forged groups of supporters around themselves.
These generals might be able to make a decision on their own, but that
decision would count for little if their network were not large enough to
ensure that the ensuing order was obeyed. These social networks were
necessary because of structural issues in the army of the period, the per-
sonal fears of the emperor of granting too much support to one general,
and the personalities and relationships of the officers in the army. Fully
understanding the relationships between these officers requires consider-
ing not just the famous generals such as Belisarius and Narses, but also
their supporters and detractors such as the Johns, Martins, and Uliarises
of the Byzantine army.
CHAPTER 6
Parnell examines the families of Byzantine army officers in two ways. First,
he addresses the issue of nepotism by examining several families in mili-
tary service. There is little evidence to suggest that an officer with a fam-
ily member already in the army was preferred for high rank, but there is
ample evidence that multiple members of a family served in the military
both at the same time and across generations. He presents the family trees,
as far as they can be reconstructed, of several military families. Second,
Parnell addresses the wives and dependent children of Byzantine army
officers. While elite authors would have preferred that officers focus on
their military duties, officers often chose to prioritize their families and
personal affairs.
In the sixth century, as in previous centuries of the Roman state, many
soldiers and officers had relatives in military service. This rule held true for
Romans and non-Romans alike. Very occasionally these family connections
might have resulted in what is considered typical nepotism: fathers or older
relatives secured positions for their sons or younger relatives. However, these
cases appear to have been quite rare, and more often what we find is simply
that several people from the same family served the military specifically or
the government in general in a variety of capacities. When examining such
instances of family service, it is important first not to assume any modern,
1
Kelly 2004, 181.
2
On the Scipios and other early elite Roman families, see Scullard 2003.
3
Bellow 2003, 142.
4
Syme 1967, 7.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 133
gens) and cognomen (surname of the family).5 However, by the time of the
later Roman Empire this practice was in eclipse. Most of the individuals
of the sixth century were identified by only a single, personal name, with
perhaps a patronymic (an indication of the name of the individual’s father)
or other identifier (like a nick name) provided to distinguish them from
homonyms. This makes it quite challenging to identify family relationships
in general during this period. The result is that for most of the individuals
known from this period, the historian can know nothing about their rela-
tives, let alone whether they also served in the army and what position they
might have held. Despite these barriers to knowledge, evidence for family
service in the sixth-century army is surprisingly strong in a qualitative if
not necessarily quantitative sense. In other words, while there are not a
large number of examples in which multiple men from the same family
served in the army, the examples that exist are fairly detailed. Examining
a few of these families provides insight into the concept of nepotism and
family service in this period and helps to determine how these issues might
have impacted military careers.
5
Scullard 2003, 333–7 connects the importance of the trinomina with the solidifying of
elite Republican families and their influence on politics.
6
Smythe 2006, 138; Tougher 2013, 303.
134 D.A. PARNELL
not need to have children to pursue this strategy. Justinian, who remained
childless throughout his life, called upon his extended family to serve more
than any other emperor in the sixth century. Figure 6.1 shows the extent
of Justinian’s family, with individuals who held office in bold.
Justinian’s cousins, Justus and Germanus, both served him as generals.
Justus had the less illustrious career, serving on the eastern frontier under
Belisarius and Martin, before dying of illness in 544.8 Germanus, per-
haps the most famous non-emperor among Justinian’s relatives, had in the
words of one historian ‘a long career of frustrated promise.’9 He served as
General of Thrace in the reign of Justin I, put down the African mutiny in
536, opposed Khusrau at Antioch in 540, and in 549 was given the com-
mand of the Italian theatre, but tragically died of illness while en route
to possible glory.10 Although Justinian’s cousin Boraides is not recorded
to have held office, he did play an important part in Justinian’s reign by
helping to topple the rebel Hypatius during the Nika Riot.11 Germanus’
two sons, another Justin and another Justinian, both served the emperor
Justinian as generals. Justin was considered important enough to be
7
See Jones, Martindale, and Morris 1971 [Hereafter PLRE], 2:1315, stemma 10.
8
See PLRE 3: Iustus 2.
9
Treadgold 1997, 207.
10
See PLRE 2: Germanus 4.
11
Procopius Wars 1.24.53.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 135
12
On Justin’s death, see Theophanes Chronicle AM 6063 and Evagrius Ecclesiastical
History 5.1–2. Theophanes places the death in 570, and says that Justin II had previously
appointed Justin as the ‘prefect of Alexandria.’ Evagrius places the death in 566 and makes
no mention of an office. Evagrius’ account is to be preferred: Justin was probably killed in
566, shortly after the accession of Justin II. See also PLRE 3: Iustinus 4.
13
See PLRE 3: Iustinianus 3.
14
See PLRE 3: Marcellus 5 and Iustinus 5.
15
See PLRE 3: Ioannes 46.
16
See PLRE 3: Areobindus 2.
17
See Chap. 4, ‘Appointment: Gaining a Position.’
136 D.A. PARNELL
to conduct Phocas’ reign of terror and to defend him from his enemies,
and most of them eventually died with him. Figure 6.2 shows Phocas and
his relatives, with individuals who held office in bold.
While the family tree of Phocas is smaller and less complete than that
of Justinian, it is still possible to see that Phocas made significant use of
his relatives to prop up his government. Like Justinian, Phocas used his
relatives chiefly as senior military officers. His reign was a troubled one
and the usurping emperor was constantly under threat, either from for-
eign powers or internal disorder. Even more than Justinian, Phocas felt
isolated, probably because of his usurper status, and desperately needed
men in charge of his armies whose loyalty he could trust. Phocas therefore
appointed his nephew Domnitziolus as his General of the East (magister
militum per Orientem) in 604. Domnitziolus served him well, capturing the
rebel general Narses and remaining loyal to Phocas to the bitter end when
he was overthrown by Heraclius.19 Comentiolus, Phocas’ brother, replaced
Domnitziolus as General of the East sometime before 610, and served the
emperor loyally. He refused to accept Heraclius as emperor and was assas-
sinated as he prepared to resist.20 Domnitziolus the Elder, Phocas’ other
brother, was made Master of Offices (magister officiorum), and in 610 was
18
See PLRE 3:1542, stemma 5.
19
See PLRE 3: Domnitziolus 2.
20
See PLRE 3: Comentiolus 2.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 137
21
See PLRE 3: Domnitziolus 1.
22
See PLRE 3: Sergius 41.
23
Theophanes Chronicle AM 6100.
24
See PLRE 3: Priscus 6.
138 D.A. PARNELL
for loyalty did not guarantee that they would be successful in their jobs. That
Phocas eventually fell to a coup originating in Africa was probably due just as
much to the uneven ability and loyalty of his family members as it was to his
general unpopularity or the skill and appeal of Heraclius.
While there is quite a bit of information about the relatives of the
emperors because they tended to be important figures in contemporary
histories, these were not the only families with multiple members serving
in the military. In fact, most soldiers or officers who had a relative in ser-
vice were not related to the imperial family. To get an idea of what some of
these other families were like, we turn to two of the more prominent non-
imperial families in government service in the sixth century. The family of
Rufinus, a general for Anastasius and an ambassador for Justinian, defi-
nitely served in the government for at least two generations. Figure 6.3
shows what is known of his family, with office-holders in bold.
Almost nothing is known about the patriarch of the family, Silvanus,
except that he was acquainted with Perozes, king of Persia (r. 459–484).26
This could indicate that Silvanus had served as an ambassador to Persia, but
no source confirms this and in theory he could have gained an acquaintance
with Perozes in other ways. His son, Rufinus the Elder, was the General of
Thrace (magister militum per Thracias) in 515 and one of the ambassadors to
the Persians in 532 who helped to negotiate the Perpetual Peace.27 Rufinus’
son John was appointed the count of the straits of the Pontic Sea (comes
angustiarum pontici maris) in which capacity he fought against the Huns
25
See PLRE 2:1329, stemma 36.
26
See PLRE 2: Silvanus 7.
27
See PLRE 2: Rufinus 13.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 139
and, like his father, also served as an ambassador to the Persians in 540.28
Timostratus, Rufinus’ brother, served in the army as a duke on the eastern
frontier, at least in 503–506 and again in 527, and perhaps continuously for
the whole period in between.29 The children of Timostratus, named Rufinus
and John, were likewise military men. John was the general in charge of
the garrison at Dara when the Persians captured it in 573 and he served
the Persians after he fell into their hands.30 Rufinus, the son of Timostratus,
served as a subordinate commander in the Army of the East during the reign
of Maurice and lived long enough to assist the general Narses on his cam-
paign to restore Khusrau II to the throne of Persia in 591, perpetuating
his family’s long relationship with the Persian royal family.31 This timeline
would make Rufinus, the son of Timostratus, an older man in 591, but that
is not impossible given what is known about older generals like Narses and
Liberius earlier in the century.32 This family thus served the empire, mostly
in the army but also occasionally as important ambassadors, over the course
of nearly 90 years. Their service was concentrated along the eastern frontier,
fighting and negotiating with Persia. There is no reason to believe that their
contemporaries found their family service atypical or inappropriate. If not for
a few passages that specifically link them together as a family and the similar-
ity of their names, we might not even know that these individuals were all
related. The fact that they were all part of the same family was simply not
important enough for contemporaries to dwell upon in their writing, which
probably means that family service was fairly common. It is therefore possible
that many more such families lie hidden in history because they did not use
easy-to-follow naming strategies and the sources did not bother to point out
their family relationship when they recorded their deeds.
The family of the general and rebel Vitalian was large and boasted many
important military officers over the course of several generations. It is slightly
surprising that Vitalian’s family would be so prominent and successful in
military service. The patriarch of the family, Patriciolus, apparently served
the emperor Anastasius loyally. He fought in the Persian war of 503 and
possibly became a commander of the federates (comes foederatum) some-
time between 503 and 513.33 Vitalian himself had an even more successful
career, although perhaps not in the opinion of Anastasius. Like his father,
28
See PLRE 3: Ioannes 7.
29
See PLRE 3: Timostratus.
30
See PLRE 3: Ioannes 87.
31
See PLRE 3: Rufinus 7.
32
On older generals, see Chap. 4, ‘Appointment: Gaining a Position.’
33
See PLRE 2: Patriciolus.
140 D.A. PARNELL
Vitalian also fought in the Persian war of 503, but in 513 he rebelled against
Anastasius on religious grounds (he opposed the emperor’s monophysite
interpretation of the nature of Christ). As a rebel, he defeated two differ-
ent armies sent against him from Constantinople. As part of his eventual
reconciliation with the emperor, Vitalian was made the General of Thrace
in 514, but a defeat the next year likely cost him the position he had won.
The next emperor, Justin I, promoted him to be a general of the troops in
the emperor’s presence (magister militum praesentalis) in 518 and granted
him the civilian and essentially honorary office of consul in 520. However,
shortly after this, Justin thought better of it and had Vitalian murdered, pre-
sumably because of the potential threat he posed to his rule.34 One would
not expect Vitalian’s family to be particularly successful in military advance-
ment after his murder. After all, Vitalian had rebelled against one emperor
and had been murdered by another, which might be imagined to be a black
mark on his family. However, his family members appear to have suffered no
prejudicial treatment and in fact moved on to important roles. Figure 6.4
shows what is known of Vitalian’s family, with office-holders in bold.
Fig. 6.4 The family of Vitalian.35 The dashed line indicates uncertain or dis-
puted paternity.
34
See PLRE 2: Vitalianus 2.
35
See PLRE 3:1546, stemma 13.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 141
Although there are several gaps in this family tree and not all of the
relationships are certain, it is still evident that this family served in the gov-
ernment across several generations even after the rebellion, rehabilitation,
and murder of Vitalian.36 The most significant uncertainty in this particu-
lar family tree is the paternity of the brothers Cutzes, Buzes, and Benilus.
All three served Justinian as army officers. The evidence for the relation-
ship between the three and Vitalian is found in the chronicle of John
Malalas. The chronicler reports that ‘Cutzes of Vitalian’ set out against
Persian forces with an army.37 It is likely that Malalas means that Cutzes
was the son of Vitalian, and at least one translator of the Malalas text
thinks this was the case.38 No other source confirms this relationship. This
makes the connection uncertain, but it is not implausible. The chronol-
ogy fits and there is no particular reason to doubt Malalas. If Cutzes was
indeed the son of Vitalian, then it follows that his brothers were as well,
and we can trace the family through three more generations. Cutzes was
a duke in charge of frontier troops at Damascus in 528 when the Persians
captured him.39 Benilus fought as a mid-level commander in Lazica on the
eastern frontier in 550.40 Buzes had the most successful career of the three
brothers. He served as a duke at Palmyra in 528, when his brother was
duke at Damascus. By 540 Buzes had been promoted to General of the
East (magister militum per Orientem). He belonged to the social network
of Belisarius, a factor that worked against him in 542 when he was impris-
oned for his role in plotting with Belisarius while Justinian lay sick with the
plague. He returned to the emperor’s confidence in 549 after the death
of Theodora, when he was dispatched as a general against the Gepids. By
554 he was in the East, fighting the Persians in Lazica. He remained active
until at least 556.41 If it seems hard to imagine that Justin and Justinian
would promote and trust the sons of a man they had murdered, one needs
only to remember that Justinian promoted and trusted Artabanes even
after the man had actively plotted to kill him.42 Of course we do not have
all the facts of the situation or know exactly what each individual might
36
On the service of the family of Vitalian, see comments by Whately 2013, 54 and
Ravegnani 1998, 90.
37
Joh. Mal. 18.26 describes Cutzes as “Κουζτὶς ὁ Βιταλιανοῦ.”
38
Jeffreys, Jeffreys, and Scott 1986, 256, make this translation: ‘Koutzis the son of
Vitalianus.’ But compare PLRE 3:366, which characterizes the relationship as ‘doubtful.’
39
See PLRE 3: Cutzes.
40
See PLRE 3: Benilus.
41
See PLRE 3: Buzes.
42
See Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a Position.’
142 D.A. PARNELL
have thought or said, but promoting the sons of Vitalian to high military
office appears to be in line with other instances of Justinian’s capacity to
forgive and trust again.
Domnentiolus was the nephew of the three brothers, and conse-
quently probably the grandson of Vitalian. He fought on the eastern
front, from as early as 531, and in Italy he was the commander of the
garrison at Messana in 550.43 Domnentiolus’ son, John, was a confidant
of the emperor Justin II. He is the sole known male member of this
family who apparently did not serve in the military. Instead, he received
the dignity of a patrician and served as an ambassador to the Persians
in 567.44 The other side of the family was perhaps even more famous.
Vitalian’s nephew, John, played an important part in the Gothic Wars.
Procopius generally referred to him as John, the nephew of Vitalian,
in order to distinguish him from homonyms. He served as a general
in Italy from 537 to at least 552 and was both a great thorn in the
side of Belisarius and a great supporter of Narses.45 As has already been
explained, John furthered his fame by marrying Justina, the daughter
of Justinian’s cousin Germanus.46 The final member of the family who
emerges from the historical record is Bonus, either the nephew or cousin
of John. Bonus was the commander of the garrison at Genoa in 544, but
nothing further is known of his career.47 He possibly enjoyed this posi-
tion thanks to the patronage of John, who was a general in Italy at this
time, but there is no evidence to confirm that John acted as his patron.
Altogether, from Patriciolus to John the son of Domnentiolus, it is pos-
sible to track five generations and eight individuals of this family that
served in the Byzantine military.
These families are all fairly large and each boasted many men that served
in the army, often at the same time. For most families that boasted more
than one soldier or officer, the information available is far less complete.
For example, Agathias relates that a commander named Dabragezas who
served in Lazica had a son named Leontius, who also served in the army.48
Agathias also explains that Dabragezas was an Antian, or non-Roman.
Unfortunately, there is no other information about this family, including
43
See PLRE 3: Domnentiolus.
44
See PLRE 3: Ioannes 81.
45
See Chap. 5.
46
See PLRE 3: Ioannes 46.
47
See PLRE 3: Bonus 2.
48
Agathias Histories 3.21.6, 4.18.1. See Chap. 3.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 143
whether other individuals from it might also have joined the army. Perhaps
there were no other militarily important family members. Geoffrey Nathan
has argued that contemporary Late Antique historians might have focused
only on relatives whom they respected, or felt they ought to respect, and
ignored others.49 On the other hand, Dabragezas might have had addi-
tional important relatives and evidence of them simply has not survived. If
more complete records existed, some smaller families like this one might
prove to have more military men and other families that are currently
completely unknown might emerge. It should always be kept in mind that
our knowledge of named individuals and their relatives in army service is
extremely limited, comprising only a small proportion of the total number
of men that actually served in the army during this period. This necessarily
restricts our ability to determine just how frequently related men served in
the army at the same time.
49
Nathan 2000, 164.
50
Kelly 2004, 48.
51
The relevant references are Codex Justinianus 2.7.23.2 and 12.19.7.1.
144 D.A. PARNELL
52
Jones 1964 writes about father-to-son nepotism in the bureaucracy of the fifth century:
‘there was a tendency for the service to become hereditary by the spontaneous desire of their
members to place their sons in the same office’ (1:606).
53
See PLRE 3: Petrus 6.
54
See PLRE 3: Theodorus 34.
55
See PLRE 3: Sergius 4 and Solomon 1.
56
Kelly 2004, 191.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 145
from his uncle.57 This could indicate that such transfers of a position
or rank from older to younger family members were not condemned,
even if they were rare. It is also clear that even in these circumstances,
when an older relative appeared to bequeath a position to a younger
relative, that the emperor remained firmly involved in the transfer. In
both cases it was the emperor who decided to promote the younger
relative: Justin II clearly appointed Theodorus, because the position
was not directly transferred from Peter to Theodorus; and Justinian
clearly appointed Sergius, because Solomon was already dead at the
time of Sergius’ appointment. So while a younger relative might occa-
sionally follow an older relative into a position of power, this was due at
least as much to the younger relative’s ability to convince the emperor
to appoint him as it was to his relationship with the older relative who
previously held the position.
Rather than succeeding to the specific office their fathers held, it seems
that sons or other male relatives typically aspired merely to military service
in general. The exact position they ended up with depended upon both
their skills and their level of personal influence with other army officers
and the emperor. Over time, it is conceivable that a family’s successful
service might earn it a reputation as a family particularly suited to serve
in the military. For example, a successful general perhaps increased the
prospects of his younger family members’ also receiving commissions as
officers. This could explain the success of the family of Vitalian in the mili-
tary, or the particular affinity that the family of Rufinus had for the east-
ern frontier and engagement with Persia. It is also possible that families
with multiple members in military service were able to build up trust with
the emperors who noticed them. That is, the more members of a family
served in the army, especially in important posts, the more the emperor
could be convinced that members of that family were loyal to his rule.
In turn, this meant more high positions and offices for members of that
family. Family service could then be perpetuated both by the interests of
individual family members in the army and by specific promotion from
the emperor. In this way, even those families that did not have long tradi-
tions of military service might create them within the span of a generation
with, perhaps, the explicit approval of the emperor. On the other hand,
the emperor did not necessarily have to be actively involved in the pro-
cess. Extremely successful military officers could use their own influence
57
Procopius Secret History 5.28–32.
146 D.A. PARNELL
62
The study of the Byzantine family is increasing in popularity. For an introduction to the
topic, see Nathan 2000, Cooper 2007, Harlow and Lovén 2012, and Brubaker and Tougher
2013. Despite this increase in popularity of the study of Byzantine families generally, the
families of Byzantine soldiers specifically remain woefully understudied and poorly under-
stood. See Lee 2007a, 142–4 for a brief introduction to the families of soldiers and, for an
introduction to women in warfare in general, see Whately, ‘Women and Warfare in the Age
of Justinian’ (forthcoming).
63
Compare Lee 2007a, 147–50.
64
Procopius Secret History 1.12–13.
65
Cooper 2007 argued that men were frequently ‘marrying down’ in this period to women
below their economic and social standing (155–7). Theodora herself of course did not come
from a distinguished family. So perhaps in marrying Antonina, Belisarius was not quite as
unusual as Procopius made him out to be.
148 D.A. PARNELL
the East and had just captured Sisauranon when he heard that Antonina
was on her way from Constantinople to join him on the eastern front.
At this news, Belisarius ordered the army to retreat from Persian terri-
tory and he returned to meet his wife as soon as possible. The general
wanted to confront Antonina about her affair with Theodosius. Procopius
scornfully announced that because of this ‘Belisarius was reviled by all
the Romans for sacrificing the most critical needs of the state to his pal-
try domestic affairs.’70 The historian’s choice of words in this sentence is
important: the needs of the state are ‘critical,’ while domestic affairs are
merely ‘paltry.’ In letting his family issues take precedence over his military
service, Procopius believed that Belisarius had made a mistake and publi-
cally telegraphed his subordination and emasculation at the hands of his
wife. The third way in which Belisarius enabled Antonina to impact the
operations of the army was in the death of the general Constantine. As
described in the previous two chapters, Constantine was accused of theft
and then apparently attempted to attack Belisarius when questioned about
it.71 Procopius attributed Constantine’s execution not long after this to
Antonina’s anger over Constantine advising Belisarius to do away with her
because of her affair with Theodosius.72 So Belisarius’ relationship with his
wife impacted not just his own career but also apparently threatened the
lives of the officers who served with him.
The relationship of Belisarius and Antonina is almost certainly an
exceptional case. If all Byzantine army officers had such convoluted rela-
tionships with their wives that impacted the operation of the army, it is
hard to imagine that the army could have functioned at all. Procopius’
repeated accusation that Belisarius was under Antonina’s power high-
lights the unusual nature of their marriage. According to Procopius,
Antonina had ‘quite overpowered’ Belisarius and she had ‘used magic
to subdue him and she could break his will in but a moment.’73 For his
part, Belisarius ‘willingly allowed’ her to pull the wool over his eyes,
he was ‘extraordinarily infatuated’ with her, he was a ‘pathetic fool,’ he
was ‘overcome by a burning erotic passion,’ and he ‘promised to be her
devoted slave.’74 The frequency of these accusations and the vocabulary
70
Procopius Secret History 2.21.
71
See Chap. 5, ‘Explaining Social Networks in the Reign of Justinian.’
72
See Procopius Secret History 1.24–30 and Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a Position.’
73
Procopius Secret History 1.13, 3.2, translated by Kaldellis 2010.
74
Procopius Secret History 1.18, 4.41, 1.39, 3.1, 4.30, translated by Kaldellis 2010.
150 D.A. PARNELL
Procopius utilized indicates not simply his disapproval but also his sur-
prise that a man, especially a successful military officer, would conduct
his private life in this fashion. Procopius’ disapproval and surprise may
be partially caused by the fact that husbands in general seemed to have
been gaining power legally and socially within the marriage bond vis-à-
vis their wives during this period, and this was therefore an even more
unusual case.75
While Belisarius and Antonina’s relationship was exceptional,
Belisarius was hardly the only officer to allow his family’s private affairs
to impinge upon official military business. Not everyone who neglected
their duties to pay attention to their family had a resentful historian
with intimate knowledge of the family, so the kind of detail available
for Belisarius and Antonina is lacking for other military families. It was
clear to Procopius that John, the nephew of Vitalian, neglected his
duties in order to arrange an advantageous marriage for himself. In 545,
Belisarius sent John to Constantinople to convince Justinian of the need
to send reinforcements to Italy. Instead, John took advantage of the
time in Constantinople to marry Justina, the daughter of the emperor’s
cousin Germanus. In doing so, he apparently ignored his orders from
Belisarius and ‘accomplished none of the objects of his mission.’76 In this
case an officer allowed the prospect of a marriage and then the achieve-
ment of that prospect to interfere with his career, although given John’s
continued career success after this it is obvious that his decision did not
adversely affect him. Indeed, marrying the daughter of the emperor’s
cousin might have improved his career prospects despite Procopius’ dis-
approval of how John sacrificed military interests for a personal matter.
John’s marriage might have endangered military operations in Italy in
one other way, if Procopius is to be believed. The empress Theodora
apparently disapproved of the marriage and even made threats against
John’s life. When John returned to Italy to resume his post, he refused
to meet with Belisarius apparently out of fear of Antonina, who had a
close relationship with Theodora. John evidently believed that Theodora
would use Antonina to strike at him in retaliation for his marriage.77 As
a result of John’s avoidance of Belisarius, Rome fell once again to the
Ostrogoths in 546. Blaming all of this on John’s marriage may be an
75
Cooper 2007, 144, 152–160.
76
Procopius Wars 7.12.11.
77
Procopius Secret History 5.8–15.
OFFICERS AND THEIR FAMILIES 151
78
See Chap. 5.
79
Procopius Wars 7.11.10–16.
80
Ammianus 20.4.10.
152 D.A. PARNELL
practice because of the attention paid to them, less noble and powerful
families also made a regular habit of such family service. Although the
emperor tolerated family service and a certain degree of nepotistic promo-
tion, cases of typical nepotism were incredibly rare and the emperor was
constantly involved in the promotion of individuals to high command,
whether they had family members in similar positions or not. The wives
and children of military officers claimed quite a bit of their attention, to
the chagrin of Procopius and presumably others like him who believed an
officer’s primary responsibility should be to his official duties. Byzantine
soldiers and officers, like men at all times, sought to balance their family
lives and their careers but occasionally chose, for some reason or another,
to prioritize their family. The disapproval of Procopius and others of simi-
lar opinion apparently had no impact upon this decision.
CHAPTER 7
This chapter concludes the series of investigations into the significant rela-
tionships of Byzantine army officers. Having examined the way officers
interacted with the emperor, their fellow officers, and their family mem-
bers, it remains to look at the relationships officers had with the soldiers
under their command. This is the most difficult relationship to explain,
partly because of a dearth of evidence, and perhaps also because officers
did not often have significant relationships with the enlisted soldiers serv-
ing under them. In fact, the most common way that soldiers were men-
tioned in the sources of the sixth century, and the most common way
senior officers seemed to refer to them, was as large, nameless groups as
in ‘the soldiers’ or ‘the men’ or ‘the army.’ In these instances there are no
indications of individuality or suggestions of regard between individual
officers and soldiers. The soldiers are a homogenous mass of manpower
that the general and officers harness to win a battle or achieve an objec-
tive. Most descriptions of battle scenes fall into this category. One of the
most famous battles of the sixth century, the Battle of Busta Gallorum
in 552, provides a convenient example. In describing the disposition of
the Byzantine army at the start of the battle, Procopius explains that the
army was split in three divisions, a left wing, center, and a right wing. He
names the officers in command of each formation, but of course makes no
attempt to name any of the soldiers in each division.1 Here the soldiers are
simply the building blocks of the army that Narses and his officers will use
to win the battle.
Soldiers also appear as large, homogenous groups in circumstances
beyond battle descriptions. They are utilized this way by authors as audi-
ences for the speeches of generals, whether those speeches are designed to
inspire the soldiers for a coming battle, reproach them for lax discipline, or
reward them for a job well done. The pre-battle speech is a major fixture
of war history in both ancient and Late Antique sources. Such speeches
purport to record what the general tells his troops just before battle begins
to encourage them to victory. Often the author also provides a compan-
ion speech, allegedly given by the enemy general to his own troops. Such
speech pairs appear before most major battles in Procopius, and many
minor battles as well.2 The tradition of recording pre-battle speeches con-
tinued with Agathias and Theophlyact.3 Historians have long doubted the
historicity of these pre-battle speeches, which most likely often reflect what
the author believed the general ought to have said rather than what the
general really did say.4 Aside from a few possible exceptions in the works
of Procopius, who was after all the secretary and probably the ghostwriter
of Belisarius, most pre-battle speeches in the sources reflect the words of
the author, not the general.5 This is not to say that pre-battle speeches
did not occur. They almost certainly did and were an obvious way for a
general or senior officer to communicate with and inspire his soldiers.
The Strategikon of Maurice even enjoins the giving of speeches as one of
the duties of a general.6 But because of the impersonal setting of these
speeches, in which one officer communicated to the entire army before
a battle, they have little to say about the relationships between individual
officers and soldiers.
Speeches given by the general to reproach large groups of soldiers
for poor behavior or reward them for a job well done also offer little
1
Procopius Wars 8.31.1–5. See Rance 2005, 453. Other instances of soldiers described as
merely their battle formations: Procopius Wars 2.25.16–17; 4.3.4–5; Theophylact History
1.9.7; 2.3.1–2.
2
Procopius Wars 1.14.13–28; 4.1.12–2.32; 8.30.1–20.
3
Agathias Histories 1.16; Theophylact History 3.12.11–14.1.
4
Taragna 2000; Pazdernik 2006, 183; Sarantis 2013b, 78–79; Kaldellis 2010, 260–2;
Codoner 2003. See also the discussion in Greatrex 2014, 97–98.
5
Compare Treadgold 2007, 179.
6
Maurice Strategikon 7.4.
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 157
On the next day the general held a review of the soldiers: he favored the
wounded with gifts, gold and silver decoration was a reward for courageous
spirit, and he weighed out the recompense according to the extent of the
7
See Chap. 8, ‘The Opinion of Average Civilians.’
8
Procopius Wars 3.16.1–8.
9
Procopius Wars 5.10.28–33.
10
Theophylact History 2.2.5.
11
Procopius Wars 7.1.8.
12
Procopius Wars 6.7.33–4.
158 D.A. PARNELL
perils. For some people received promotion as a prize for fortitude, another
man a Persian horse, fine in appearance yet good in battle, another a silver
helmet and quiver, another a shield, breastplate, and spears.13
13
Theophylact History 2.6.10–11, translated by Whitby and Whitby 1986, 51.
14
Procopius Wars 8.31.9. See also Rance 2007, 376.
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 159
15
Procopius Wars 5.29.20. Other stock descriptions of the bravest warriors in a battle
without details of what they did that was so brave: Procopius Wars 4.5.7–9, 4.20.19, 7.11.18.
16
Theophylact History 2.18.15–25. Similarly, a soldier named Suarunas was praised for his
bravery in assaulting a fort in Lazica in 557 (Agathias Histories 4.20.4).
17
Procopius Wars 6.13.14–15.
18
Agathias Histories 3.27.1.
19
Procopius Wars 6.27.12–15. In 537, Belisarius’ life had similarly been saved by another
guardsman named Maxentius (5.8.14).
20
Corippus Iohannis 8.630–6.
160 D.A. PARNELL
killed the Gothic champion Coccas in a duel before the Battle of Busta
Gallorum in 552.21 Duels like these were antithetical to military discipline,
but victory in one would gain a soldier the adulation of his peers and at
least some sort of recognition—even if it were chastisement for breaking
rank—from his officers.22
Unfortunately, while it is likely that such acts of valor and heroism as
have been related here would have attracted the attention of officers, there
is very little evidence on what interaction between officer and brave soldier
might have occurred after these acts. Presumably in most instances the
soldier had an audience with the general or senior officer, either privately
or before the entire army, and received some sort of award. This probably
would have looked very similar to the description Theophylact provided of
Philippicus rewarding his army, quoted above. Procopius provides another
rare but tantalizing glimpse of this process by giving the exact action of
a brave soldier and the specific reward received in return. Just before the
Battle of Busta Gallorum in 552, Narses selected fifty soldiers to seize a
nearby hilltop that would help to anchor the left wing of the Byzantine
army during the battle. Procopius writes:
The fifty won great renown for valor, but two of them distinguished them-
selves particularly in this action, Paulus and Ansilas, who had leaped out
from the phalanx and made a display of valor surpassing all others… after
they had checked the onrushes of the enemy many times, it came about that
the sword of one of them (this was Paulus) was bent double by the frequent
cutting of the wooden shafts and so was utterly useless. This then he imme-
diately threw on the ground, and seizing the spears with both hands he
would wrench them from his assailants. And by wrenching four spears from
the enemy in this way in the sight of all he made himself the chief cause of
their abandoning their attempt. Wherefore, in consequence of the exploit,
Narses made him a personal guard of his own from that time on.23
It would have been nice indeed to be given a window to see the moment
when Narses greeted Paulus and inducted him into his guardsmen (bucel-
larii) as reward, but at least the basic variables of the equation are known.
A soldier’s valor on the battlefield translated to being incorporated into
Narses’ personal guards, where he would presumably earn more pay, have
21
Procopius Wars 8.31.13–16.
22
Compare Rance 2005, 429.
23
Procopius Wars 8.29.22–28, translated by Dewing 1914, 5:359–61.
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 161
better access to Narses and the command structure of the army, and begin
a relationship with the general which might see him to yet further promo-
tions and advances in the future.
In addition to personal bravery in the midst of battle, soldiers could hope
to get noticed for clever tactical suggestions before a battle even began.
While tactical planning was normally the domain of officers, enlisted sol-
diers sometimes had ideas of their own which might be adopted. In 536,
while Belisarius and the Byzantine army were besieging Naples, an Isaurian
soldier discovered that the aqueduct that brought water into the city was
unguarded and could possibly be enlarged enough to allow infiltration.
This soldier, unnamed by Procopius, did not feel comfortable proposing
his plan to an officer directly, so he first went to another Isaurian, Paucaris,
one of the guardsmen of Belisarius. Paucaris reported the matter to the
general and Belisarius, ‘being pleased by the report, took new courage,
and by promising to reward the man with great sums of money induced
him to attempt the undertaking.’24 The aqueduct was enlarged, a com-
mando raid entered the aqueduct and opened the city gates, and Naples
fell to Belisarius. The unnamed Isaurian soldier is not mentioned again,
but given the earlier pledge of Belisarius it is reasonable to assume that
he received some sort of financial reward for his plan. Twenty years later,
a soldier received a different reward for proposing a plan to take a forti-
fied location. While besieging a Misimian fort in the Caucasus in 556, an
Isaurian soldier named Illus was on sentry duty. He spied some Misimians
filling water jugs and surreptitiously followed them back up the hill to
the fort, observing that only eight men guarded this particular entrance.
Bolder than the unnamed soldier at Naples, Illus went directly to the gen-
eral Martin and reported this discovery. When Martin planned an assault
on this entrance, he designated a hundred picked men and named Illus to
move first at the head of the group.25 The attack was a success, the fort
was taken, and the Misimians suffered a severe defeat. Illus is not men-
tioned again. His reward had apparently been participation in the assault,
although it is reasonable to suppose that he might also have received
money or promotion as well. It seems that officers not infrequently took
advice from soldiers like the unnamed Isaurian and Illus, even if it did not
always have a happy ending for those proffering the advice. In 547, Ziper
and Ariarith, guardsmen of John Troglita, urged their patron to fight a
24
Procopius Wars 5.9.11–21.
25
Agathias Histories 4.17.6–18.1.
162 D.A. PARNELL
battle at Marta in North Africa. John took the advice, and the two guards-
men were promptly killed in the ensuing battle.26
Before moving on from positive interactions, it is worthwhile taking
a moment to consider interactions that were not the result of bravery in
battle or suggesting a plan but rather were the result of miscellaneous,
unusual good deeds. The name of Mindes, an otherwise unknown Isaurian
soldier fighting in Italy under the command of Paulus, is recorded only
because of his choice not to defect to the Goths. When Paulus surren-
dered a tower in Rome to Totila in 549, Totila gave Paulus and his 400
soldiers the option of returning to Constantinople or joining the Gothic
army. Only Paulus and Mindes chose to return to Constantinople.27 Surely
that journey must have been an opportunity for officer and soldier to
bond. Unfortunately, nothing more is known of either of them, so it is
not possible to speculate on their relationship. Another opportunity for a
soldier to shine came from perhaps the most interesting use of a guards-
man in the sixth century. During the Battle of Solachon in 586, a divi-
sion of the Byzantine army overwhelmed its Persian opponents and began
looting the Persian baggage train even though the battle was still raging.
Philippicus, the Byzantine general, needed to restore order so the rest of
the battle would not be lost, but could not go himself. So the general gave
his helmet to Theodorus, one of his guardsmen, ordered him to put it on
and sent him to go chastise the looting soldiers. The soldiers apparently
thought Theodorus was Philippicus and so obediently stopped looting
and returned to the main engagement, leading to a Byzantine victory.28
This task certainly counts as unusual, requiring neither bravery in battle
nor a clever plan on the part of Theodorus, but nonetheless it was an
important job and crucial to the Byzantine victory. Perhaps the success of
Theodorus in this quest improved his reputation in the eyes of Philippicus
and set the guardsman in line for future assignments and rewards.
26
Corippus Iohannis 6.534–5, 670.
27
Procopius Wars 7.36.26–29.
28
Theophylact History 2.4.1–4. See also analysis of the battle in Haldon 2001, 52–6.
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 163
29
See more about bucellarii in Chap. 2, ‘Basic Divisions.’
30
For example, see the rescue of John, the nephew of Vitalian, delegated by Belisarius to
Ildiger in Procopius Wars 6.16.21–3 (and Chap. 5, ‘Belisarius and Narses in Italy, 538–539’).
Among many other examples, see Procopius Wars 6.21.13–16 and Theophylact History
6.8.9.
31
Procopius Wars 6.2.10–14. See 7.11.19–21 for a similar example.
32
Procopius Wars 7.30.6.
33
Procopius Wars 4.5.6. See 3.16.9 for a similar example.
164 D.A. PARNELL
34
Procopius Wars 2.21.2.
35
Procopius Wars 7.28.5–17.
36
Procopius Wars 7.15.1–4; 2.19.15–16.
37
See Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a Position.’
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 165
heroism that might result in praise and further interaction with the general,
as we saw above. They could equally lead to an opportunity to misbehave or
fail, and result in condemnation and punishment. But by themselves, these
mentions of individual guardsmen in the sources say relatively little about
the relationship between officers and soldiers generally or even generals
and their guardsmen specifically. We might speculate on the relationships
hidden behind these mission details, but it is impossible to be definitive.
38
If the army of the sixth century was any less disciplined than the army of earlier or later
periods, it was due to complaints because of late pay, which is a fault of the situation and the
government rather than the soldiers. See Jones 1964, 1:648–9, 678; Southern and Dixon
1996, 170–4; Lee 2004, 122–3; Lee 2007a, 72; Rance 2007, 374; Kaegi 1981, 1–137.
166 D.A. PARNELL
39
For more on desertion and defection, see Chap. 8, ‘The Opinions of Soldiers and
Officers.’
40
Procopius Wars 7.35.23.
41
Procopius Wars 7.35.23–30.
42
Procopius Wars 7.20.4–7.
43
Procopius Wars 6.26.3–26.
44
Procopius Wars 7.12.18–20.
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 167
front of the empire during this time period. Africa was consumed by a
serious mutiny throughout the 530s and 540s, which was complicated by
the survival of pockets of Vandal resistance as well as the intervention of
the Moors. The Army of the East, normally very trustworthy, mutinied
against Maurice in the 580s. The Army of Thrace, under the leadership
of Phocas, mutinied against Maurice in 602, a revolt that cost him his
throne and his life. The sources are rarely specific when discussing embar-
rassing mutinies. While ringleaders are generally named, we know very
little about the soldiers who supported them. For instance, although we
know that in 536 there were 8000 men involved in the mutiny in North
Africa, we only know the name of the leader, Stotzas.45 In some ways, this
is not surprising. While there was an advantage to naming the ringleaders,
who became scapegoats and would be executed anyway, and to naming
those who may have been involved in sabotaging the mutiny from within,
who were therefore heroes, there was no advantage to naming individ-
ual mutineers.46 Once a mutiny had been suppressed and the majority of
the soldiers involved in it returned to loyal service, it was more advanta-
geous to forget that they had been mutinous than to stress it by recalling
their names. These major mutinies (in the 530s, 580s, and 602) were not
uprisings of soldiers particularly targeted at individual officers, and so do
not really reflect relationship issues between officers and their men. The
mutineers might have refused to accept orders from their generals, but
this refusal derived from complaints about the way the army as a whole
was functioning at the time, not from criticism of the generals in particu-
lar. For this reason, these major mutinies are addressed in more detail in
Chapter 8 as evidence of the opinions of soldiers on the Byzantine army
as an institution. Smaller scale attempts at usurpation were more likely to
be directed at an individual officer or to result in conflict between officer
and the hopeful usurper. In 537, a soldier named John attempted to usurp
power in Dara, but was quickly assassinated by a loyal group of soldiers
and citizens.47 In 537–538, Maximinus, a guardsman of Theodorus was
suspected of plotting to seize control of the Byzantine army in Africa.
Curiously, the general Germanus transferred Maximinus to his personal
guardsmen to keep an eye on him. In this case the recruitment of a guards-
man was not a reward but a way of trying to enforce loyalty. The move
45
Procopius Wars 4.15.1–2.
46
On the heroes in mutinies, see Artabanes in Chap. 4.
47
Procopius Wars 1.26.5–12.
168 D.A. PARNELL
did not work and Maximinus continued to plot, so in 538 Germanus had
him impaled for his machinations.48 While starting or attempting to start
a mutiny or usurp power might gain a soldier notoriety, it certainly did
not result in any lasting relationship with officers except perhaps in cases
where the officer joined the mutiny and the mutineers successfully resisted
imperial reprisal for some time. In general, it is unlikely that serious crimes
such as defection, accepting bribes, mutiny or usurpation led to any sus-
tained contact between officers and soldiers that might have formed a
relationship. It was far more likely to result in a permanent split between
officer and the misbehaving soldier, either because the soldier succeeded
in defection or mutiny, or because he failed and was quickly executed for
his crimes.
Relatively venial misbehavior, on the other hand, might attract the
attention of an officer to correct the behavior without actually resulting in
the execution of the offender, thus creating some opportunity for mutual
interaction leading to a relationship. Venial misbehavior ranged from gen-
eral lack of discipline to drunkenness. Officers were eager to correct lack
of discipline, but frequently undisciplined soldiers did not survive their
bouts of enthusiasm to face that correction. Chorsamantis, a guardsman
of Belisarius, was injured in a skirmish near Rome in 537. Impatient at
his recovery time, he became drunk at lunchtime one day and rode out
alone against the Goths, fought against a large number of them, and was
killed.49 Procopius blamed his barbarian lack of patience for this action,
although certainly any soldier could get drunk and do something foolish.
In 545, Ricilas, a guardsman of Belisarius, got drunk and then insisted
on scouting on his own, which led to his death at the hands of many
Goths.50 So neither of these soldiers survived to face discipline for their
unauthorized activities. Soldiers did not transgress the boundaries of dis-
cipline only when drunk. An unnamed Moorish soldier got greedy in 539
and attempted to drag off the corpse of an especially handsomely armored
Gothic soldier in the middle of the battle instead of focusing on the melee
around him. His negligence resulted in a Gothic soldier spearing him
through the calves and crippling him so that his comrades had to carry
48
Procopius Wars 4.18.1–18.
49
Procopius Wars 6.1.21–34.
50
Procopius Wars 7.11.22–25. Compare the drunken misbehavior of Uliaris in Africa
(4.4.15–25).
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 169
That soldiers were routinely aggrieved about missing pay in the reign of
Justinian appears to have been common knowledge at the time. Procopius
wrote, undoubtedly with hyperbole, that the ‘soldiers were demoralized
in so many ways, became poorer than all other classes in society, and no
longer cared for fighting in war.’56 Agathias firmly placed the blame on
the imperial auditors (logothetes), whom he said ‘began openly cheating
the soldiers out of part of their pay and not paying the rest until it was
long overdue.’57 Like Agathias, Procopius also blamed the auditors, whom
he accused of not recording the death of senior enlisted soldiers in their
books, thus pocketing their pay and preventing more junior soldiers from
promotion.58 In fact, officers in the army might have managed to suc-
cessfully redirect bitterness among the men about tardiness of pay from
themselves to the auditors. The incident described above in which the
soldiers in Rome killed Conon is the only situation in which soldiers killed
an officer over an issue that had to do with pay, and even in that situation
the soldiers complained not just of tardy pay but also ‘trafficking in grain
and the other provisions to their detriment.’59 In other cases, soldiers do
not seem to have blamed their officers for late pay. The soldiers did espe-
cially resent an auditor named Alexander, who was particularly criticized
in the History of the Wars and even accused of being solely responsible for
the deterioration of morale in the army in Italy.60 So in some situations,
officers might be able to turn resentment about lack of pay into an issue
that might form a bond between officers and soldiers against an outside
agent—an imperial auditor or the emperor himself. This option was obvi-
ously not open to senior officers who needed to remain impeccably loyal
to the emperor, and this is where resentment would turn to mutiny, as in
the serious revolt in the East in 587 against the general Priscus and the
even more serious rebellion of Phocas in 602.61
Over and above their regular pay, soldiers expected to receive extra
perks, particularly a share of the booty when they won a great victory.
However, they were routinely suspicious that their officers would try to
withhold this bonus or somehow reduce it. There was a pattern of offi-
cers exploiting their men in the Roman army, dating back centuries, so
56
Procopius Secret History 24.8.
57
Agathias Histories 5.14.2.
58
Procopius Secret History 24.5–6. See Jones 1964, 1:676.
59
Procopius Wars 7.30.7.
60
Procopius Wars 7.1.28–33.
61
On the importance of a general maintaining loyalty to the emperor, see Chap. 4.
OFFICERS AND THEIR MEN 171
perhaps their suspicion was not unwarranted.62 In 544, Solomon and the
army in Africa won a battle with the Moors and the general took in a
large amount of booty. When he did not immediately distribute it to the
soldiers, they complained and believed they were being cheated. Solomon
was obliged to promise that he was merely waiting until the campaign was
over and the situation was settled before he began the distribution.63 In
593, Priscus found himself in a different situation. He ordered that the
booty collected by his army thus far should be primarily divided between
the emperor Maurice and his children. It is not clear if this was an imperial
order or Priscus’ own initiative. The soldiers, ‘insulted by their attenuated
spoils,’ proceeded to mutiny. Theophylact credited Priscus with a speech
that convinced the soldiers to accept this new distribution of the spoils,
although we should be suspicious that words alone satisfied the soldiers
in this instance.64 Clearly an important part of the relationship between
officer and soldier in the army was the fair distribution of booty or spoils
after a victory. Soldiers likely would have accepted the officers getting a
share and perhaps even the emperor getting a share, but they expected
something for themselves. Officers could keep soldiers happy by simply
adhering to this tradition and making sure the soldiers received something
at these distributions. Failure to reward the soldiers in this way would give
the soldiers a reason for grievance that could lead to the murder of the
officer, general mutiny, or even the overthrow of the emperor.
62
Jones 1964, 1:646; Southern and Dixon 1996, 82.
63
Procopius Wars 4.21.23–8.
64
Theophylact History 6.7.6–8.3.
172 D.A. PARNELL
one in which soldiers bunked together, worked together, and ate together,
and most senior officers lived alongside but separate. On the march or in
battle, low-ranking officers such as decarchs (commanders of ten), about
whom we know very little, shielded senior officers, including those we
know best, from direct contact with the vast majority of enlisted soldiers.
This is not to say that there was no interaction between senior officers and
soldiers, but this interaction most frequently took forms other than direct
personal relationships between individuals. The evidence makes clear that
there were expectations from both sides of the divide. Officers expected
soldiers to follow orders, maintain discipline, respect civilian property, and
to occasionally move themselves to extreme acts of bravery. If the soldiers
met these aspirations, they could expect to be praised in groups and have
individuals in their midst singled out for special reward. Soldiers expected
their officers to lead them to victory, ensure (as much as was within their
power) that they received their regular pay in full and on time, and to fairly
and promptly distribute booty after victories. If soldiers felt that officers
were not fulfilling any of these tasks, they resorted to desertion, defection,
strike, or mutiny. So while it is fair to say that senior officers and enlisted
soldiers did not generally have personal relationships with one another,
they did have a more formalized group relationship, with expectations and
means of reinforcement or redress on both sides. When the situation was
ideal, the give-and-take of this arrangement was practically invisible and
the army operated like a well-oiled machine. When stresses were applied
to this relationship, as happened not infrequently during the wars of the
sixth century, cracks appeared in the edifice and the difficulty of maintain-
ing the balance of obligations between senior officers and enlisted soldiers
was obvious.
CHAPTER 8
An issue that probably had some impact on the careers and relationships
of army officers was the public perception of the institution in which they
served. Here we are concerned not so much with relationships between
individual army officers, or between officers and civilians, but rather with
the overall opinion that the population of the Byzantine Empire held of its
army. Byzantine society was complex and there were most likely significant
differences in the degree of knowledge of the army, between those who
lived in the capital and those who lived in the provinces, between those
who were government employees and those that were not, between those
who were wealthy and those who were poor, and so forth. It is therefore
very likely that the degree to which perception of the army was positive
depended significantly upon who was proffering the opinion. A wealthy
senator would probably have a different perspective than a mid-level
bureaucrat who would again differ in view from a poor peasant farmer.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to catalog the opinion of every class or
interest group in the empire because there simply is not enough source
material to create such specific analyses. Neither is it possible to identify
a general ‘favorability rating’ of the army for the whole population of the
empire. The lack of evidence to make certain assessments does not, how-
ever, make it impossible to pursue the question of the public perception
of the army. There is a good deal of scattered evidence in the histories
and chronicles of the sixth century that can be used to make tentative
assessments of some aspects of popular opinion of the army. This evi-
1
See Chap. 2, ‘Recruitment in the Sixth-Century Army.’
2
Treadgold 1995, 149–154, 203.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 175
3
Whitby 1989, 68, 78.
4
See Chap. 7, ‘Negative Descriptions of Individual Soldiers.’
5
The naming of the deserter Indulf is a rare exception (Procopius Wars 7.35.23).
6
Procopius Wars 5.17.17.
7
Procopius Wars 7.18.26–28.
176 D.A. PARNELL
8
Eleven instances of Roman soldiers deserting to the Ostrogoths: Procopius Wars 5.17.17,
6.26.3–7, 7.12.13–16, 7.12.19–20, 7.15.7, 7.18.26–28, 7.20.4–7, 7.23.1–7, 7.35.23,
8.31.11–16, 8.33.10. See Chap. 7, ‘Negative Descriptions of Individual Soldiers,’ for discus-
sion of some of these examples.
9
Procopius Wars 2.7.37. Compare a similar episode in 7.36.7–29.
10
Procopius Wars 7.12.13–16, Procopius Secret History 5.5–6.
11
Procopius Wars 6.21.27–42.
12
Procopius Wars 7.15.7.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 177
made a pact with Totila to let the Goths into Rome.13 Although money
was involved in this example, it is reasonable to speculate that the Isaurians
were also weary from a long siege and were eager for it to be over and to
be on the winning side. So, depending on the circumstances, Byzantine
soldiers and officers could and did find reasons to desert. Their desertion
was a vote with their legs that the conditions of the army were unaccept-
able and that they believed they could find better opportunities elsewhere.
It is reasonable to wonder whether desertions for the reasons just
described reflect a negative perception of the army and military service on
the part of those defecting. Desertion for reason of survival, such as when
one was under siege for a long time and despaired of rescue, was not a
specific indictment of the Byzantine army of the sixth century, as soldiers
have been deserting or giving up and surrendering in such situations since
siege warfare began.14 Money, likewise, is an issue common to people of all
time periods. There is, however, some reason to suspect that money might
have particularly been a reason for discontent among Byzantine soldiers
and officers at certain times in this period. The devastating effects of the
plague from 541 onwards would have put serious strains on the empire’s
finances, resulting in Justinian needing to economize whenever possible.
Much of this economizing seems to have taken the form of delaying the
pay of the army during the worst of the crisis.15 This eased the financial
burden of the army and allowed the government to remain solvent, but
not surprisingly displeased the soldiers. From the complaints of soldiers
and officers about their pay being late to the requests of Belisarius for
money to pay his soldiers in the field, evidence abounds that in the 540s
and beyond military pay was sometimes late.16 Of particular interest are
the steps that Justinian took to begin resolving this issue, because they
indicate that the emperor was fully aware of the problem. When Narses
was preparing for his expedition to Italy in 552, Justinian furnished him
with a great deal of money not only to recruit soldiers but importantly to
‘pay the soldiers in Italy all the money which was due to them from the
past, for the emperor had been delinquent in this matter for a long time,
since the soldiers were not receiving from the public treasury, as was usual,
13
Procopius Wars 7.20.4–7.
14
On siege warfare in this period, see Whitby 2013.
15
Treadgold 1995, 16; Rance 2007, 374; Kaegi 1981, 41–63; Compare Whitby 2000b,
306–7.
16
Complaints about late pay: Procopius Wars 2.7.37 and 7.36.7–29. Belisarius’ requests:
Procopius Wars 5.24.1–17 and 7.12.3–10.
178 D.A. PARNELL
the pay assigned to them.’17 Just as interesting, Narses was also to use the
money ‘to bring pressure upon those soldiers who had deserted to Totila,
so that they would… reverse their choice of allegiance.’18 So issues of late
pay had made soldiers and officers more prone to desert. Perhaps they
believed that the enemy might hire them and be able to pay them more
expeditiously. This sort of desertion was a criticism of the army only in the
sense that the army was not functioning correctly at that moment (in its
job of providing pay), but did not necessarily indicate any serious discon-
tent with the army when it was operating normally. Justinian was aware of
all of this, and hoped that the restoration of back pay would satisfy those
who were upset but still loyal and even win back those who had already
deserted.
A related way to measure the opinion of military men is to track and
analyze mutinies. There were several important and long-lived mutinies in
the sixth century that on the surface might seem to reflect serious discon-
tent with the operation of the Byzantine army on the part of both soldiers
and officers.19 As we saw briefly in Chapter 7, Africa was consumed by a
serious mutiny throughout the 530s and 540s, which was complicated
by the survival of pockets of Vandal resistance as well as the intervention
of Moorish tribes. The Army of the East mutinied against Maurice in the
580s, when the emperor ordered his general Priscus to cut the troops’
pay. Maurice also drove the Army of Thrace to mutiny under the leader-
ship of Phocas in 602. Of all these mutinies, the available information is
most complete about the North African mutinies of the 530s and 540s.
Procopius gave three reasons for the start of the African mutiny in 536:
Byzantine soldiers married to Vandal women wanted the lands of their
wives’ former husbands; Arian (and thus most likely non-Roman) soldiers
in the army were irritated about being excluded from Orthodox Easter
services; and a group of 400 Vandal prisoners of war escaped to Mauretania
where they planned to resist the Byzantine occupation.20 However, in
describing the speeches of the mutineers later in the narrative, Procopius
gives pride of place to complaints about delayed pay. The mutineer leader,
Stotzas, rhetorically asked: ‘Do you not remember that you have been
17
Procopius Wars 8.26.5–6.
18
Procopius Wars 8.26.6.
19
See Chap. 7 for a brief introduction to these mutinies as well as examination of more
minor mutinies.
20
Procopius Wars 4.14.7–21. On the link between Arianism and non-Roman identity, see
Chap. 3, ‘The Distinction between Romans and Barbarians.’
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 179
deprived of the pay which has been owing you for a long time back, and
that you have been robbed of the enemy’s spoil, which the law of war has
set as prizes for the dangers of battle?’21 This hints that, despite the other
named causes, delayed pay was probably the primary driver of the mutiny.
When Germanus arrived to suppress the mutiny in late 536, he found that
two-thirds of the Army of Africa had joined, which probably meant about
10,000 men.22 Fortunately, the newly arrived general had brought with
him a considerable war chest with which he began to pay all due back-pay
to the loyalist soldiers. As a result of this generosity, mutinous soldiers
returned to loyalty and joined Germanus in droves.23 The response to
the arrival of Germanus and especially to his offer of back-pay indicates
that issues of delayed pay may have been the crucial motivating reason for
the original mutiny for a good number of those involved. Yet Germanus’
arrival and the promise of pay did not end the mutiny, which indicates that
not only were there other issues in play such as the claims of the Vandal
wives or complaints about Arianism, but that bitter feelings had already
cemented differences between the two sides. Germanus gathered his
army and defeated the mutineer army in battle, but a core group of them
escaped under the leadership of Stotzas and fled to Mauretania where they
retained their independence for a decade, frequently fighting as an ally for
the Moors in their wars with the Byzantines.24 Clearly larger issues than
delayed pay were at stake for this group of soldiers and officers, but these
determined holdouts represent a minority not just of the Byzantine army
in Africa as a whole but also of the original mutiny. Procopius pegs their
number in 545 at about 1000, or about one tenth of the size of the origi-
nal mutiny.25 So for the majority of those involved in the African mutiny,
pay must have been the primary motivator, since they willingly returned
to loyalty when Germanus offered to rectify that complaint. The African
mutiny is therefore a good reminder that even among limited groups of
soldiers whom we know about from an accurate source, perception of the
army was not uniform.
Information on the other major mutinies of the sixth century is not
as abundant, but the sources make it unequivocally clear that both the
21
Procopius Wars 4.15.55, translated by Dewing 1914, 2:353.
22
Procopius Wars 4.16.3 and see Treadgold 1995, 63.
23
Procopius Wars 4.16.4–7.
24
Procopius Wars 4.17.24–35, 4.27.7–9.
25
Procopius Wars 4.27.8.
180 D.A. PARNELL
mutiny of the Army of the East in the 580s and the mutiny of the Army
of Thrace in 602 were motivated by monetary issues in some fashion. In
587, the Army of the East mutinied when Maurice ordered the general
Priscus to reduce the army’s pay. Theophylact writes: ‘When the third day
had passed and the reduction in the soldiers’ remuneration was no longer
in concealment, but became clear to the whole throng, extreme anarchy
made its entry: the masses converged on the general’s tent, some carry-
ing stones, others swords, as the occasion served each man.’26 The revolt
was fairly serious in that the army seems to have remained out of imperial
control for most of the year. The soldiers elected Germanus, the duke of
Phoenicia, as their general, and under his command they continued to
fight against the Persians as required, but refused to accept either Priscus
or Maurice’s new nominee, Philippicus, as their general until 588.27 Since
Theophylact mentions threats to their pay as the reason for the mutiny,
and because the entire Army of the East was apparently involved rather
than just a splinter faction, it seems safe to assume that money was in fact
that primary cause of the mutiny for the vast majority of soldiers and offi-
cers involved.
The last mutiny mentioned, that of Phocas in 602, may be dealt with in
summary fashion. For either strategic or parsimonious reasons (or both),
Maurice ordered Peter, the General of Thrace, to winter his army north
of the Danube in enemy territory. The order apparently filled the sol-
diers with ‘extreme rage’ such that they refused the orders of their officers
and then proclaimed Phocas as their general.28 The mutinous army under
Phocas faced no serious opposition as it marched to Constantinople, and
Maurice was so unsure of his chances that he divested himself of his regalia
and fled the city.29 The easy success of the mutiny is evidence of its broad
appeal. The relative obscurity of Phocas before the mutiny began makes
it unlikely that the driving motivation was some sort of cult of personality
around Phocas. By this point the soldiers and officers of the army were
quite familiar with Maurice’s economizing and weary of threats to their
lifestyle and their salaries. It was not that they disliked being soldiers, or
disliked army service in general, or even disliked one general in particular.
26
Theophylact History 3.1.9, translated by Whitby and Whitby 1986, 73.
27
Theophylact History 3.5.10.
28
Theophylact History 8.6.2–7.7.
29
Theophylact History 8.9.7.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 181
In fact, one might argue that the soldiers and officers under Phocas par-
ticularly enjoyed military service and wanted it to continue unchanged.
The mutiny of Phocas and the others before it were not indications of
anger at the army as an institution, but rather demonstrations of outrage
at the government when it tried to change the conditions of service to
which the soldiers had all been accustomed. In 602 particularly, it was
outrage at being made to winter north of the Danube in enemy territory.
In 587, it was fury over a proposed permanent reduction in their pay. In
the 530s and 540s, it was indignation over the fact that the usual pay was
very late. So in a strange way, the mutinies of the sixth century are not
necessarily proof of a negative perception of the army among the soldiers
and officers who served in it. Instead, these mutinies are a clue that per-
haps suggests that the majority of military men actually had a positive
perception of their army during this period. These soldiers grumbled and
mutinied not because they disliked military service, the organization of
the army, or their rate of pay, but because they approved of all three and
merely wished them to continue in the form to which they had become
accustomed. With the notable exception of the small mutineer group in
Africa that maintained independence for a decade, all mutineers described
in these pages (who were not killed) were back in legitimate military ser-
vice with the Byzantine Empire within a year of their mutiny. The mutinies
had, in a sense, accomplished the goal of the mutineers: to maintain the
standards of service in the army that the men had never wanted to change
significantly in the first place.
30
Fear 2007, 427–37.
31
Fear 2007, 427.
32
Bagnall 1993, 174. Compare Lee 2007a, 173.
33
On the experiences of civilians in war, see Fan Chiang 2015.
34
Lee 2007a, 138–141.
35
Procopius Wars 2.9.14.
36
Procopius Wars 2.14.1–4. Fan Chiang 2015 argues that many captured civilians proba-
bly died en route to their new home (161–4).
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 183
might be high, the state could realize profit after the captives had been
settled, become financially viable, and began to pay taxes. Other enemies
with less complex governments enslaved Roman civilians simply to sell
them off for immediate profit. Pope Gregory the Great, for example, saw
Roman slaves who had been captured by the Lombards being prepared
for sale in 595.37 Beyond the threat of slavery or forced migration, women
in particular faced the extra risk of being raped if captured in war.38 This
threat is to be seen mostly in the sources on the occasions when armies
refrained from raping captured women, which was apparently considered
rare enough to merit praise. Procopius praised Totila for keeping cap-
tured women safe from the rapists among his soldiers, although they ‘were
extremely eager to have intercourse with them.’ For this action Totila
‘won great renown for moderation.’39 The exaggerated praise of Totila is
an indication that preventing his troops from raping captured women was
considered quite an achievement for a general. Therefore, civilian popula-
tions could expect enslavement, forced migration, or rape during times of
war if they were in the wrong place at the wrong time. While these fears
in particular would have been concentrated on enemy armies rather than
the Byzantine army, it is easy to imagine that Byzantine civilians might
have generalized the fear and concern to war overall and perhaps even to
their own army. Poor civilians at risk of enslavement, kidnapping, or rape
would have good reason to be anxious about the threats posed by war and
the movement of armies, including those sent to protect them, that may
herald the arrival of war.
Beyond threats that typically came from enemy armies, Byzantine civil-
ians had good reasons to be wary of encountering their own army even
in times of peace. One of the primary reasons to fear the arrival of the
army was that civilians were required to billet soldiers in their homes when
necessary.40 While soldiers in the frontier armies had fixed garrisons and
rarely traveled far, soldiers in the field armies moved about frequently and
often invoked their legal right to seek shelter in civilians’ homes.41 When
arriving at a city, certain men were appointed to match lists of soldiers
37
Gregory Epistle 5.36.
38
Lee 2007a, 141–5, Fan Chiang 2015, 115–20. See also Ps.-Joshua Stylites Chronicle 86.
39
Procopius Wars 7.20.29–31. See 7.6.4 for a similar incident. See also Whately, ‘Women
and Warfare in the Age of Justinian’ (forthcoming).
40
Lee 2007a, 167–9, MacMullen 1963, 77–80, Fear 2007, 437.
41
Lee 2007a, 165, Fear 2007, 437.
184 D.A. PARNELL
with available civilian homes and to escort the soldiers to their billets.42
Not surprisingly, billeting could result in hardship for civilian populations.
Civilians were only required to provide shelter for soldiers, but once in
their homes soldiers could use intimidation or force to extract even more
from their hosts. The chronicler known as Pseudo-Joshua Stylites com-
plained vigorously about billeting in Edessa in the early sixth century:
When those who came to our assistance ostensibly as saviours were going
down and coming up, they looted us in a manner little short of enemies.
They threw many poor people out of their beds and slept in them, leaving
their owners to lie on the ground at a time of cold weather. They ejected
others from their houses, going in and living in them. Others’ cattle they
led away by force as if plundering an enemy. They stripped some people’s
clothing off them and took it away. They used rough treatment on others
for the sake of obtaining anything whatever.43
Complaints about billeting this detailed and dramatic are rare in the
sources, but that does not necessarily mean that it was rare for soldiers
to abuse their right of claiming billets. In fact, regular imperial legisla-
tion in the fourth and fifth centuries against soldiers extorting additional
privileges from their hosts makes it likely that the practice was widespread
during that earlier period.44 In addition to the abuses associated with bil-
leting, the soldiers and even senior officers could through various forms of
harassment make themselves quite unwelcome. Procopius flags the petty
harassment by small groups of soldiers in a speech he puts in the mouth
of a Roman who was pretending to desert to the Persians: ‘As you know,
they [the Roman soldiers] are constantly wandering about the country
here in small bands and doing violence to the miserable country-folk...’
they are ‘robbers, whose ancient custom it is to fear the Persians and to
beat the farmers.’45 In this particular instance the false deserter is attempt-
ing to convince the Persians that he is a deserter in truth and therefore
needs to run down the Byzantine army in his monologue. Despite these
literary constraints, it is easy to imagine at least a kernel of truth in the
man’s complaints. If the soldiers could be expected to extort additional
42
Procopius Wars 3.21.10.
43
Ps.-Joshua Stylites Chronicle 86, translated by Trombley and Watt. See also Fear 2007,
439.
44
Fear 2007, 438.
45
Procopius Wars 1.9.7.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 185
benefits from their hosts in billets, it is easy enough to also imagine them
extorting a cup of wine, a loaf of bread, or a goat from isolated peasants
in the fields as they patrolled the area. In some instances it was not hous-
ing or food that the army demanded, but people. In 572, Marcian was
General of the East and had in his army, according to the church historian
Evagrius, ‘some farm workers and herdsmen who had been drawn from
the tax-payers.’46 This vague turn of phrase has been interpreted in vari-
ous ways: as non-combatant support personnel temporarily incorporated
into the army, or as soldiers enlisted with some degree of persuasion, or
conscripted with some degree of force.47 No matter which interpretation
is true, it is clear that in this situation rural civilians were incorporated
into the army without volunteering for the army or identifying with it—
after all to Evagrius they are not soldiers but farm workers and herdsmen.
So, just as the soldiers might extort food and supplies from the civilian
population, the senior officers might extort people themselves. Because of
these various forms of harassment, it is likely that many segments of the
Byzantine population resented and feared the arrival of units of the army.
It is interesting to note that one of the good deeds attributed to Theodore
of Sykeon, a sixth-century saint, was helping people who were oppressed
by government officials. ‘The blessed Saint was very sympathetic and piti-
ful to all; if anyone was oppressed by an official or a tax collector or by
anybody else he came to the Saint and laid the matter before him.’48 While
soldiers are not specified here, it is easy to imagine that they were included
in ‘anybody else’ and given what we have seen about the ways military
men might harass civilians it is reasonable to expect that some might ask
the saint for help.
Another way that average civilians might have developed a low opin-
ion of the Byzantine army was through the use of the army in policing
duties.49 Emperors and senior administrators regularly turned to the army
to put down civil disturbances and there is ample evidence of the vio-
lence done by the army in these instances. The most infamous example
of this was the resolution to the Nika Riot of 532, when soldiers under
the leadership of Mundus and Belisarius slaughtered 35,000 inhabitants
46
Evagrius Ecclesiastical History 5.8.
47
For discussion of the possibilities, see Evagrius Ecclesiastical History, translated by
Whitby 2000, 265 n. 31.
48
Life of Theodore of Sykeon 147, translated by Dawes and Baynes 1977, 184.
49
Compare Fear 2007, 441–2.
186 D.A. PARNELL
in large urban areas where there was a distinct possibility of civil distur-
bances. Such violence rapidly became an accepted part of the urban life-
style such that, in certain situations, far from fearing military men, civilians
might use the violence of soldiers to their own ends. In 457, an unnamed
Roman soldier murdered Proterius, the patriarch of Alexandria. On the
surface of it, this appears to be a straightforward example of excessive and
illegal violence by a soldier. The reason for the murder is however quite
interesting. This soldier was upset because Proterius was complaining that
he and his fellow soldiers had not killed enough of the patriarch’s religious
opponents in exchange for the payment the patriarch had given them!56
So in a great twist of irony, the bishop died at the hands of those whom
he had hired to kill his own enemies. Here there is no sign on the part of
Proterius of fear or disapproval of the military or even its illegal excesses,
but instead a desire to control it for his own purposes.
Although the majority of interactions between soldiers and average civil-
ians do seem to suggest that many civilians would have reason to resent or
fear the army, some incidents that are suggestive of more positive feelings
are to be found. In 500, when there was famine and disease in Edessa,
soldiers ‘established places; the ill slept in them and the soldiers took care
of their expenses.’57 While just one example, this hints at another form of
interaction between average civilians and the army in which soldiers were
responsible for humanitarian assistance in times of crisis. Whether enough
positive emotion and gratitude was attached to these interactions to out-
weigh the everyday petty harassments of ill-behaved soldiers is impossible
to determine. However even the staunchest opponents of the army and its
excesses, like Pseudo-Joshua Stylites, had to admit that there were decent
and well-behaved soldiers within its ranks, ‘for in a large army like that
there are certain to be some such people.’58 Sometimes even billeted sol-
diers would behave appropriately as the law required and cause no trouble
to their civilian hosts.59 In addition, it is worth remembering that senior
officers like Belisarius made repeated appeals to their soldiers to behave
courteously to civilian populations.60 The fact that such appeals had to
be repeated is probably an indication that the soldiers were not heeding
56
Zachariah of Mitylene Chronicle 4.1–2.
57
Ps.-Joshua Stylites Chronicle 43.
58
Ps.-Joshua Stylites Chronicle 96.
59
Procopius Wars 3.21.9–10.
60
For example, see Procopius Wars 5.10.28–33 and Theophylact History 2.2.5. For more,
see Chap. 7.
188 D.A. PARNELL
them, but it at least demonstrates that some army officers were attempting
to curtail the harassment that has been described in this section. Finally,
as mentioned above, authors were probably more likely to write about
negative interactions between civilians and soldiers, which means that the
existing catalog of evidence is likely skewed. There may have been many
more positive interactions between average civilians and the army that
were simply not recorded.
So far this analysis has, in binary fashion, been concerned with evidence
for either the positive or negative perception that average civilians might
have had of the army. It is worth considering, however, that a large num-
ber of civilians may not have had any strong opinion of the army. Unlike
wealthy intellectuals or government officials, who spent time thinking
about the army in abstract terms, a typical poor city dweller or peasant
farmer probably would have only thought about the army in practical
terms. In other words, if soldiers were not in their face, much less in their
town or village, there was no need to have an opinion of the army. The
extent of interaction between average civilians and the army varied widely
across the empire.61 On the frontiers, where the frontier armies were per-
manently stationed, and near the frontiers, or on major roads that criss-
crossed the empire, which would have been areas frequented by the field
armies, contact was undoubtedly high. It is from these regions that all the
stories of interaction between average civilian and soldier related in this
section originate. However, inhabitants of smaller cities and rural areas in
the empire’s interior would have been much less likely to see even a mod-
erately sized army. For inhabitants of these regions, the army might just
be a few soldiers who came through town every now and then to assist in
collecting taxes or posting notices. In such situations, people were unlikely
to have either a strongly positive or negative perception of the army as an
institution, though they might have good or bad relationships with the
individual soldiers that they occasionally saw. So the army probably made
a significant impact on some civilian populations and a negligible impact
on others, and opinions of the army and its soldiers varied considerably.
about the army.62 In this section, the term ‘elite’ is used rather loosely to
define educated individuals of means who had some connection to the
ruling class of bureaucrats, administrators, and army officers.63 Many of
these elite lived in Constantinople, and even those that did not had some
connection to those that did. This elite was, in the words of Sam Barnish,
A.D. Lee and Michael Whitby, a ‘polycracy,’ meaning a group of individu-
als empowered in different ways—by the military, the civilian government,
and even by the Church.64 This elite was quite diverse in its interests, and
while it is not guaranteed that all of its members were interested in the
army, it is clear that at least some were because of the circulation of works
like Procopius’ History of the Wars.65 It is not possible to know what all or
even a majority of Byzantine elites felt about the army, but the works of
elite Byzantine authors like Procopius and Agathias provide insight into
the perception of at least some of them.
Before examining opinions about the army as a whole, it is worthwhile
to consider the fact that elite authors made many judgments on individual
military men. Not surprisingly, Byzantine writers found fault with some
soldiers or officers but praised others. Procopius found room to praise
military men in the works he authored.66 Sometimes the historian focused
his commendation on a specific instance of bravery. For example, the com-
mander Artabazes was praised for his valor in seizing a gate during the siege
of Verona in 542, and in the first siege of Rome in 537 Procopius inten-
tionally singled out Athenodorus, George, and Theodoriscus as the three
most valiant fighters in a skirmish.67 At the Battle of Mount Aurasium in
540, Procopius trumpeted the valorous exploits of Rufinus and Leontius,
two brothers serving under Solomon.68 In other instances, Procopius
praised an officer based on the totality of his career rather than one con-
spicuous moment. As we saw in Chapter 3, Procopius commended Pharas
62
Lee 2007a approached this question by examining letters sent between elite civilians and
important military officers (153–163).
63
See Whately 2013, 50 on defining terms such as ‘elite.’
64
Barnish, Lee, and Whitby 2000, 199–200.
65
Whately 2013 suggests that ‘a sizeable portion’ of the elite had an interest in the military
(52) while Scott 2012 argues that ‘local potentates’ and Justinian himself were more inter-
ested in struggles for power within the empire than wars abroad (18–20). On the popularity
of Procopius’ works, see Procopius Wars 8.1.1 and Treadgold 2007, 189.
66
Stewart 2016b, 36–40.
67
Procopius Wars 7.3.6–17, 5.29.20–21.
68
Procopius Wars 4.20.19.
190 D.A. PARNELL
for his good character, since he was ‘energetic and thoroughly serious and
upright in every way.’69 His tribute to Sittas was particularly touching. On
the general’s untimely death in 539, Procopius mourned that he died ‘in a
manner unworthy of his valor and his continual achievements against the
enemy, a man who was extremely handsome in appearance and a capable
warrior, and a general second to none of his contemporaries.’70 Perhaps
some of these instances of praise were a way for Procopius to recognize
personal friends or acquaintances, but even after the historian had left
Belisarius’ service and therefore presumably did not have as close of a
personal connection to the army, he still singled out officers deserving
of praise. He commended Nazares, ‘a man of note’ for his ‘remarkable
exhibition’ of warrior prowess in Italy in 544.71 Of Bessas, who mounted
the siege ladders at Petra to attack the Persians in 551, though he was
more than 70 years old, Procopius says he became ‘an object of respectful
admiration among all men.’72 Other authors, who did not have Procopius’
close connection to the army, also singled out individual officers to praise.
Theophylact was quite fond of Philippicus, whom he praised as a ‘man of
talent.’73 Agathias lionized Narses, arguing that ‘fortune lent a hand to
his excellent generalship’ and that he possessed ‘a remarkable degree of
shrewdness and an extraordinary capacity for coping effectively with any
eventuality.’74
Despite the many instances of positive appraisal of the character and abil-
ities of officers, authors also frequently offered harsh criticisms. Procopius
criticized many, including even his own patron Belisarius, in the Secret
History. As we saw in Chapter 6, he accused Belisarius not only of weak
moral character and being dominated by his wife, but also of allowing that
domination to interfere with his military affairs to the extent of irregularly
ordering the murder of the general Constantine.75 The Secret History is
also home to Procopius’ utter evisceration of the general Sergius, who was
accused of being ‘soft and unwarlike, quite young in years and immature
of character, envious and hugely arrogant toward all people, emasculated
69
Procopius Wars 4.4.29–31.
70
Procopius Wars 2.3.26.
71
Procopius Wars 7.11.18.
72
Procopius Wars 8.11.39–53, 8.12.30–35.
73
Theophylact History 1.13.2.
74
Agathias Histories 2.9.1, 1.16.1.
75
Procopius Secret History 1.15–30 and see Chap. 6, ‘Wives and Children of Justinian’s
Men.’
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 191
by his tender lifestyle yet blown up with pride.’76 While the most famous
invective is to be found in the Secret History, the historian was also will-
ing to condemn in the History of the Wars as well.77 In the latter, as dis-
cussed in detail in Chapter 5, he leveled serious charges of insubordination
against John, the nephew of Vitalian, and the general Justin.78 Bessas,
whom Procopius praised in the context of the siege of Petra, came in for
withering criticism for extorting money from the terrified inhabitants of
Rome when it was under siege in 545.79 In similar fashion, Procopius
excoriated Calonymus, who had been in command of the fleet in the inva-
sion of Vandalic Africa in 533. Instead of returning goods stolen by his
sailors from the inhabitants of North Africa, he kept them for himself,
until he paid ‘his just penalty’ by dying of apoplexy.80 Procopius called
out the general Areobindus who in his first battle was terrified at the sight
of blood and death and so ‘turned coward’ and fled.81 Lest we imagine
that Procopius’ ire was confined to military men, it is worth remembering
that he openly reviled many of Justinian’s most important civil ministers
as well. The praetorian prefect John the Cappadocian was declared the
‘basest of all men,’ and the quaestor Tribonian was charged with being
‘extraordinarily fond of the pursuit of money and always ready to sell jus-
tice for gain.’82
As with praise, elite criticism of individual army officers in the sixth cen-
tury was not limited to Procopius. Agathias was horrified by the murder of
the Lazian king Gubazes at the hands of the officers John and Rusticus. In
a speech purportedly given by Lazians, Agathias even disowned the two as
countrymen: ‘these murderers are not fit to be called Romans.’83 Evagrius
castigated the scribo Acacius, sent to Nibisis to inform Marcian that he was
relieved of his command as General of the East, as a ‘reckless and arrogant’
76
Procopius Secret History 5.28–32 and see Stewart 2016a on gendered vocabulary used
of eunuchs in this period.
77
Greatrex argued that both the Wars and the Secret History contained invective and that
the only reason that the Secret History had to be published separately was because the
emperor Justinian was still alive, not because it had material inappropriate for a history such
as the Wars. See Greatrex 1998b, 216–219.
78
Procopius Wars 6.21.13–16 and see Chap. 5, ‘Belisarius and Narses in Italy, 538–539.’
79
Procopius Wars 7.17.9–25.
80
Procopius Wars 3.20.22–25.
81
Procopius Wars 4.26.16.
82
Procopius Wars 1.24.11–16. John Lydus joined Procopius in his hatred of John the
Cappadocian (Lydus On Magistracies 2.20, 3.57).
83
Agathias Histories 3.4.1–7, 4.4.1.
192 D.A. PARNELL
Procopius also believed that Justinian typically allowed his generals con-
siderable leeway to commit offenses both in their private lives and in their
official capacity.90 This was not merely criticism of Justinian as emperor,
but also a contemptuous appraisal of the character and effectiveness of the
army’s officer corps.
Both Procopius and Agathias were quite concerned with the army’s
finances. They correctly determined that the army was likely to be less
effective and loyal if it was not paid adequately and in a timely fashion.
As we have seen earlier, the army was certainly not regularly paid on time
especially during the reign of Justinian. Procopius blamed Justinian per-
sonally: ‘He was always late in paying his soldiers and, generally, treated
them in a heavy-handed way. This caused many revolts that resulted in
widespread devastation.’91 Then again, in the Secret History, all the faults
of the government as a whole are Justinian’s fault. For instance, Procopius
described Justinian as ‘a moral pervert’, ‘an evil-doer’ who was ‘easily led
into evil’, who was never truthful but always deceitful and crafty, yet at the
same time deceived by others.92 These moral charges were intended to not
merely be representative of Justinian’s character but were alleged to affect
his capacity to rule and thus the functioning of the whole imperial gov-
ernment, including the mismanaged army. Agathias similarly complained
about the army not receiving its pay on time, but without explicitly blam-
ing Justinian personally. For him, the financial officials responsible were
‘openly cheating the soldiers out of part of their pay and not paying the
rest until it was long overdue.’93 There is some degree of irony in these
complaints, because many elite civilians of the period seem to have been
aware that the army was rather expensive and that its funding consumed
the majority of the empire’s budget.94 Elite authors both wanted the army
paid on time and also understood that it was expensive, but did not make
the connection that paying the army in full and on time often strained the
empire’s budget. Agathias went even further than this by complaining
bitterly that the size of the army had shrunk since an imagined heyday
in the third century. After discussing the change in numbers of soldiers,
he concluded: ‘such, then, was the extent of the drastic reductions in the
90
Procopius Wars 8.13.14 and Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a Position.’
91
Procopius Secret History 18.11.
92
Procopius Secret History 8.22–33.
93
Agathias Histories 5.14.2.
94
Fear 2007, 445–6 and Lee 2007b, 402.
194 D.A. PARNELL
95
Agathias Histories 5.13.7–8 and see the discussion on army size in Chap. 2, ‘Size and
Units.’
96
Procopius Secret History 26.23–4.
97
Procopius Wars 1.1.12–14 and see Rance 2007, 355.
98
Procopius Wars 1.1.16–17.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 195
99
Agathias Histories 2.9.12–13, translated by Frendo 1975, 42.
196 D.A. PARNELL
100
Börm 2013, 80–2.
101
See Chap. 2, ‘Basic Divisions’.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 197
the empire. This was no small feat, as left unchecked the Heruls, Huns,
and other allies of the sixth century might have caused significant dam-
age to the empire or disrupted its military strategies. Second, the army
demonstrated considerable overall strategic success, even if on a tactical
level it did not win every battle it fought. Strategic success is demon-
strated not just through the expansion of the empire into Africa, Italy, and
Spain in the wars mentioned above, but also by the effective defense of the
empire’s frontiers. While ground was lost along the Balkan frontier in the
reign of Tiberius, it was recovered in the reign of Maurice.102 The army
likewise was mostly successful in its defense of the Mesopotamian frontier
against the Persians until the reign of Phocas.103 The less-celebrated suc-
cesses of the army in Lazica in the Caucasus are yet another reason to rate
the army’s performance as at least acceptable.104 A third measure of success
is that the army did a good job of replenishing its own ranks. Recruitment
seems to have functioned well in the empire and armies were generally
not as starved of recruits and reinforcements as is commonly believed.105
Although Belisarius did have to resort to begging for reinforcements dur-
ing his second tour in Italy (544–548), this was an exception to the gen-
eral rule.106 For the most part, except during the darkest days of the arrival
of the Justinianic plague in the 540s, Byzantine armies were of reasonable
size to do the jobs asked of them. Generals were able to secure enough
recruits to man their armies without much difficulty. Limitations on army
size were primarily a matter of arranging logistics to support the army and
ensuring there was enough money to maintain pay.
The influence of the emperors’ regular interference in the army hierar-
chy seems to have been generally positive. By moving around officers from
position to position and front to front, the emperors provided a check
on the ossification of military hierarchies. This not only helped to keep
officers loyal to the emperor and to prevent them from getting entrenched
in a region, it also gave those officers a wide range of experience with dif-
102
Treadgold 1997, 220–34.
103
The loss of Dara to the Persians in 573 is an exception to the rule of the army’s mostly
successful defense of the eastern frontier, but the loss was not as catastrophic as the emperor
Justin II’s response made it seem. See Treadgold 1997, 222–3.
104
Procopius Wars 8.11–15.
105
See Chap. 2, ‘Recruitment in the Sixth-Century Army.’
106
Procopius Wars 7.12.3–10.
198 D.A. PARNELL
ferent enemies and different terrains.107 This versatility was an asset to the
empire, especially as it faced wars on multiple fronts as the sixth century
wore on. The emperors, particularly Justinian, seem also to have favored
a certain amount of continuity in their officer corps. While Procopius
thought this an indulgence for misbehavior, Justinian rarely dismissed an
officer from military service entirely, instead opting to transfer him to a
different position.108 This allowed officers, even those who might have at
first failed in their assignments, to continue to build experience and for
the army to benefit from veteran officers with varied work histories. It is
impossible to estimate how much these experiences helped the army to
win battles or wars, but this degree of continuity must have had at least
some beneficial effect.
Lastly, although the army’s relationship with civilian society might be
described as fraught at best and antagonistic at worst, the fact remains
that civilian society remained vibrant through most of the sixth century.
Certainly, civilians resented billeting and the accompanying harassment
by the soldiers; and undoubtedly many civilians lost their lives or were
raped by soldiers. In extreme cases of civil unrest, soldiers were used to
put down riots, sometimes with appalling violence and high death tolls.
And yet despite these issues, some of which were quite severe, the civilian
sector never attempted or really even contemplated a significant overhaul
of the army’s personnel or its structure. Similarly, the army never seriously
attempted a coup or military takeover of the civil government.109 Even
the usurpation of Phocas did not immediately change the overall balance
between military and civilian government, which would remain until the
upheavals of the reign of Heraclius and the later seventh century. Civilian
government and civilian society remained lively and were not suppressed
by the army. Proof of this can be found in the condemnations of the
army from both chroniclers and elite authors: if the army was successfully
suppressing civil society, such denunciations would have been much more
dangerous to write. So perhaps somewhat strangely, given the numerous
107
The general Martin, for example, served in Mesopotamia in 531, in North Africa,
533–536, in Italy, 536–540, again in Mesopotamia, 543–544, and ended his career in the
Caucasus, 551–556. See PLRE 3: Martinus 2.
108
See Chap. 4, ‘Moving on: Promotion, Transfer or Dismissal.’
109
The closest that the army came to trying to replace civilian government probably was in
542, when Belisarius and Buzes plotted to enthrone an emperor with a military background
if Justinian died. See Procopius Secret History 4.1–5 and Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a
Position.’ On the supremacy of the civil government over the army, see Börm 2013, 75–80.
PUBLIC PERCEPTION OF THE ARMY 199
Conclusion
Like all armies, the Byzantine army of the sixth century had a command
hierarchy, a series of ranks, and expectations of obedience and bravery for
the soldiers and officers that populated those ranks. However, considering
the army in terms of only these issues would be like studying a government
only in terms of its laws or a religion only in terms of its sacred text. The
army was much more than the sum of these parts. Similarly, the Byzantine
army waged wars and fought battles—events which had considerable
impact on the empire’s future. But studying the army only in terms of its
structure and performance in battle and war leaves untouched a vast web
of personal and social issues that the men who made up the army experi-
enced over the course of their careers. The sixth-century Byzantine army
was alive with personal relationships, alliances, rivalries, and networks.
It is perhaps surprising that identity, whether cultural or ethnic, was
not a major factor in the lively social world that Byzantine military men
inhabited. The explosion of research on Late Antique identity in recent
decades has possibly conditioned historians to believe that people in this
period must have cared as much about the subject as modern historians
do. Yet in the sixth-century Byzantine army, at least, it did not seem to
matter very much for an individual’s career or relationships whether one
was Roman or not, or even what ethnicity of non-Roman one was. The
concept of Roman identity was important in a general sense, and observ-
ers like Procopius and other authors seem to have been keenly aware of
the struggle for power in the campaign army in Italy between 538 and
539. Although Justinian had appointed Belisarius the commander-in-chief
of this theater, Narses came to Italy from Constantinople and contested
this authority. Both men marshaled officers from the army to support their
cause. These social networks were critical to generalship in this period,
because officers outside of a general’s network might refuse his direct
orders, even though they were technically his subordinates. At these times
the effective army was only as large as the general’s personal network.
Junior officers within these networks could also expect benefits from the
association, including protection, patronage, and promotion from their
general. While there were therefore many practical and career-oriented
reasons for these networks, it is important to keep in mind that at their
core the networks were, in fact, social. At the end of the day, personal
friendships and animosities probably mattered just as much as practical
reasons, such as career advancement, in the formation of these networks.
Another network of relationships that officers might draw on in their
careers was that of their extended family. Many Byzantine officers hailed
from families that placed men across multiple generations into military
service. Typical nepotism in high military ranks, in the sense of sons
or younger family members directly succeeding fathers or older family
members in the exact same position, seems to have been exceedingly rare
and possibly even non-existent. The combination of senior officers from
other families having their own interests and the emperor regularly mak-
ing important appointments himself prevented such handoffs of power
during this period. A more general form of family patronage was how-
ever probably fairly common. Generals occasionally fought with their
sons, nephews and brothers. Even when family members served in dif-
ferent theaters or at different times, it is reasonable to envision the more
established officer among them using his influence as much as possible to
gain appointment or promotion for his relatives. Families were not merely
networks of military men seeking to assist one another, however. It is
likely that most Byzantine soldiers and officers were married and many
of them must have had children. Not surprisingly, officers often focused
on their dependents and worried about their health and safety. The his-
torians of the sixth century were interested in affairs of state and seem to
have ignored wives and children whenever possible. They only become
visible in these sources when officers let their dependents take precedence
over their military duties, under which circumstances those officers were
roundly condemned. However, denunciation from authors like Procopius
204 D.A. PARNELL
does not seem to have bothered officers or prevented them from focusing
on their families. Byzantine soldiers and officers were neither automatons
who always obeyed orders nor single men without other obligations. They
occasionally placed army, loyalty, and career second to home, wife, and
child.
It is very difficult to determine what relationships between Byzantine
officers and soldiers might have been like, probably because officers and
soldiers did not regularly have any personal relationships with one another.
Most of the evidence points to both officers and soldiers regarding each
other in groups rather than as individuals. Officers for their part saw sol-
diers as masses of manpower for winning battles, as audiences for pre-
battle exhortations, and occasionally as unruly brigands who needed to
be urged to behave courteously to civilian populations. While they might
occasionally single out an individual soldier for praise or condemnation,
the percentage of soldiers singled out by senior officers must have been
quite low. For their part, soldiers viewed officers as the group responsible
for advocating for them with the imperial government on issues of pay and
conditions of service. This was probably especially important when pay
was late, as happened occasionally, particularly in the middle of the sixth
century. Soldiers also expected officers to promptly and fairly divide the
booty won in battle amongst them. All of this makes it clear that if officers
and soldiers did not have individual personal relationships, they did at least
have formalized group relationships with expectations on both sides. Both
sides also had some means of enforcement if they felt their expectations
were not being met. Officers of course had the obvious power of disci-
pline and even execution of offenders, but soldiers as well could push their
point by engaging in desertion or mutiny.
As has been seen, Byzantine army officers formed many and varied rela-
tionships over the course of their careers and found themselves with a
host of social concerns, from placating the emperor and satisfying the sol-
diers, to negotiating assistance with family members, and power struggles
with other officers. Evidence for all these relationships is widespread and
there is no one officer that perfectly sums up and demonstrates all of these
issues. Certainly, famous generals like Belisarius and Narses, who receive
quite a bit of attention from the sources, demonstrate many of these social
concerns simply because there is so much available information about
them. Because these two are already so well-known, however, it is more
interesting to consider a different officer as a representative of the fascinat-
ing range of relationships and social issues that Byzantine military officers
CONCLUSION 205
had to maintain and navigate. Buzes has appeared briefly in this book
several times as an example of different issues, but by way of conclusion it
is worth reviewing his whole career at once.
Buzes first emerges in the historical record in 528, when he was sta-
tioned at Palmyra as a duke in command of the local frontier soldiers. He
hailed from a family of considerable military experience and infamy.1 His
father Vitalian had been both General of Thrace and a general of the sol-
diers in the emperor’s presence, but had also rebelled against Anastasius
and died on the orders of Justin I. Buzes’ brothers Cutzes and Benilus
also served in the army around this time, as did other relatives later in
the century. Even before he met other officers in the army, then, Buzes
was already well-connected and perhaps even well-known, although not
necessarily for good reasons. Procopius described Buzes as a young man
in 528, but he did not specify his age. He was perhaps in his twenties. Of
his personality, relatively little is known. While young he tended to be rash
and headstrong, but this is not necessarily a permanent character trait.
Because of his long service in the military, despite setbacks and opposi-
tion, it might be reasonable to suppose that he was dedicated and loyal.
He might have first encountered Belisarius on the eastern frontier in 528,
when the general asked Buzes to join him at Minduos (in modern north-
ern Syria). Here Belisarius and Buzes suffered a defeat at the hands of the
Persians. Buzes was again with Belisarius in 530 at the Battle of Dara,
where he commanded cavalry on the left wing of the army. Buzes was still
with Belisarius the next year, but missed the Battle of Callinicum, staying
behind at Amida because he was ill.
He most likely remained on the eastern frontier throughout the 530s,
although nothing is known of his career during this time, likely because
Procopius’ attention shifted to the wars in Africa and Italy. In 539, Buzes
was sent against the Armenians to restore them to loyalty. He succeeded
only in assassinating an Armenian leader and driving the Armenians into
the arms of the Persians. Justinian seems to have not blamed Buzes for
this, however, because in 540 Justinian promoted Buzes to General of
the East, a position that he shared with Belisarius until 542.2 The two
evidently shared some degree of camaraderie and probably considered
each other allies. Both hailed from the Balkans, so they shared a common
background, and they had served together before. At this time, Buzes
1
See Chap. 6, ‘Examples of Family Military Service.’
2
See PLRE 3: Buzes.
206 D.A. PARNELL
and Belisarius were accused of saying that they would refuse to accept any
new emperor chosen at Constantinople without their input if Justinian,
who had caught the plague, was to die. The two generals were recalled to
Constantinople and stripped of their positions.3 Theodora appears to have
been especially irate about their discussion. Buzes was therefore impris-
oned in an underground chamber below the women’s quarters in the
palace, where he stayed for two years. In early 545, Buzes was released,
but seems to have remained a private citizen. In summer 548, Theodora
died and shortly thereafter Buzes returned to prominence by defending
Germanus against charges of conspiracy relating to the uncovering of the
plot of Artabanes.4 The combination of Theodora’s death and Buzes’
honesty in the matter of Germanus seems to have restored him to the
emperor’s trust. Like many officers in the sixth century, Buzes successfully
negotiated his relationship with Justinian and convinced the emperor of
his loyalty in spite of previous missteps.
Consequently, in 549 Buzes was again given a command and sent with
10,000 soldiers to assist the Lombards against the Gepids in the northern
Balkans. This war ended abruptly when the Gepids made peace with the
Lombards, so Buzes had no opportunity to prove himself. He had to wait
several more years for another command. In 554, he was appointed along
with three other generals to command the army fighting the Persians in
Lazica. Here he helped to command the Roman army and worked with
its Lazian allies. He enjoyed some success on this front, including the
empty satisfaction of being proven right when the other generals refused
to heed his warning and the Byzantine army was defeated in 555.5 He is
last attested by Agathias at an island in the river Phasis (today the Rioni
in western Georgia) in 556.6 Presumably he remained in the region until
at least 557, when the Byzantines and Persians signed a truce. Nothing
further is known about his career and his death is also not recorded.
In a career that spanned at least 28 years, Buzes was both an active
participant in and an example of many of the social and relational issues
described in this book. His story is a reminder that these matters were not
compartmentalized but existed simultaneously, side-by-side in an officer’s
3
See Chap. 4, ‘Review: Keeping a Position.’
4
See Chap. 4.
5
As Agathias would put it, he was able to enjoy pointing ‘out that the sole cause of the
unfortunate event had been their failure to implement his suggestions’ (Agathias Histories
4.16.10, translated by Frendo 1975, 118).
6
Agathias Histories 3.20.8.
CONCLUSION 207
7
Procopius Wars 2.13.1–7.
208 D.A. PARNELL
quite extended in duration, reveal that most military men were in general
quite satisfied with military service in the sixth century, in that the goal
was not usually to gain new concessions but merely to retain current ones.
In this sense it may be argued that most soldiers and officers were content
with their lot in life, assuming all went as promised.
The bulk of this book has concentrated on the social activity of the
army’s officer corps, but civilians by their opinions had a role to play in the
activity of the military as well. Many average civilians resented the impo-
sitions of the army, particularly the policy of billeting soldiers in civilian
homes, but also including harassment, which probably ranged from petty
to severe. The occasional heavy-handed use of the army to police urban
disturbances could result in appalling violence that would not endear the
military to anyone. Some civilians, however, must have had positive inter-
actions with whole armies and individual soldiers who behaved courte-
ously and even offered assistance during emergencies. Other civilians, who
lived far from the frontier and not near a major military road, probably
had relatively little experience of the army and therefore no considered
opinion about it. Elite civilians seem to have been quite interested in the
army’s operations, but wished it were cheaper and more effective. They
criticized the army harshly when it failed to live up to an ideal form and
usually failed to sympathize with the financial problems the government
had in maintaining the army. Such criticism of the army seems to have had
little to no impact on the way the army functioned, but probably did mean
that army officers and at least some civilians did not often see eye to eye.
While the hive of social interactions in the Byzantine army as a whole,
and in the officer corps in particular, is interesting in and of itself, it is
also but a small reflection of what must have been happening elsewhere
in the sixth century. It is easy to imagine such interactions occurring also
in the enlisted ranks of the army, in the bureaucracy, in the Church, in
small towns, and in the social circles of elite civilians. The sixth-century
Byzantine world was alive and vibrant with friendships, alliances and vari-
ous social strategies for pursuing career success. The army was not just a
drab, monolithic structure that protected a vibrant civilian world; its men
participated in similar relationships and networks and were themselves just
as diverse and lively as those in civilian society.
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INDEX
Artabanes, 9, 77, 78, 82, 89, 90, 95, social network of, 84, 85, 106,
95n72, 96, 97, 142, 206 112–14, 118, 121, 128, 142,
Artabazes, 189 176, 205
Artasires, 163 Benilus, 141, 142, 205
Aspar, 61 Bessas, 9, 48, 82, 86, 93, 95–7,
Athenodorus, 159, 189 108n23, 117, 117n71, 117n75,
auditors (logothetes), 29, 170 118, 190, 191
Avars, 55 billeting, 183–5, 187, 198, 208
Bonus, the commander, 142
bucellarii. See guardsmen
B Burcentius, 166
Bagnall, Roger, 182, 182n32 Buzes
Balkans, 5, 6, 28, 94, 116, 197, 205, career of, 81n20, 142, 205–7
206 relationship with Justinian, 95,
barbarian, 2, 9, 17, 35, 37–41, 43, 44, 198n109, 206
44n45, 45, 46, 48, 50, 52n73,
61, 63–5, 67–72, 72n125, 73,
73n129, 73n132, 74, 74n135, C
75, 76, 80, 81, 168, 202. See also Calonymus, 191
identity Cameron, Averil, 6n6, 6n8, 7n9,
neutral use of term, 67, 70–72, 74 13n2, 36n15, 36n16, 108n22,
pejorative use of term, 64, 70, 75 111n35
battles Caucasus, 86, 94, 95n74, 97, 105,
of Busta Gallorum, 20, 115n59, 161, 197, 198n107
116, 155, 158, 160 Christianity, 5, 36, 41n36, 42, 43,
of Callinicum, 16n17, 205 43n43
of Dara, 20, 65, 205, 207 Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 35n11, 37,
of Phasis, 159 37n20
of Solachon, 23n51, 162 civilians, 11, 15, 41, 42, 61, 151, 157,
of Tricamarum, 64 173, 174, 181–8, 189n62,
of the Volturnus, 195 192–5, 198, 199, 207, 208
Belisarius Comentiolus, 53, 137
career of, 93, 121–3, 142, comitatenses. See armies
148–50 commanders
giving speeches to soldiers, 69, 156, general usage of term, 23, 34,
157, 187 55–60, 81, 108, 123n94
relationship with John, 107, 108, specific titles, 22–4, 55, 139
110, 119, 151 Conon, 169, 170
relationship with Justinian, 66–68, conscription. See recruitment
81, 90–92, 96, 100, 126, 206 Constantine, the general, 84–6,
relationship with Narses, 16, 97, 99, 113, 120, 128,
108–12, 129, 161, 203 149, 190
INDEX 223
Constantinople, 4–7, 15, 28, 46, 61, 78, relationships with officers, 61, 155,
85–91, 93, 95–8, 98n80, 99n83, 171, 172, 204
111, 113, 114, 123, 127, 137, Evagrius, 47, 49n64, 71, 71n123,
138, 140, 149, 151, 162, 174, 135n12, 185, 191
180, 185, 186, 189, 203, 206
Constantius II, 152
Cutzes, 141, 142, 205 F
Cyprian, 114, 166 Fear
soldiers, 151, 152, 184
generals, 77, 99, 100, 151
D emperors, 61, 74, 77, 92, 99, 126,
Dabragezas, 34, 143, 146 127
Dara, 20, 53, 65, 139, 167, 197n103, Fear, Andrew, 182, 182n30, 182n31,
205, 207 183n40, 183n41, 184n43,
decarch (commander of 10), 21, 24, 184n44, 185n49, 193n94
30, 158, 172 federates, 8, 16, 17, 20, 23n50, 30,
Diehl, Charles, 96, 96n77 140
Diogenes, 164 foederati, 8, 16. See also federates
discrimination, 55–9, 60–3, 69, 70
dismissal, 18, 77, 78, 93–6, 137, 198
Domnentiolus, 142, 143 G
Domnitziolus, 137 Gelimer, 64–8, 74, 114
dukes, 15, 15n13, 22, 23n50, 24, 30, generals, 14, 18, 21, 22, 55–9, 126,
57, 81, 87, 94, 95, 139, 141, 134, 135, 156–8, 171, 180, 196
180, 205 appointment of, 30, 63, 79–83, 86,
96, 97, 203
promotion of, 62, 93–6, 146
E relationship with other officers,
Edessa, 184, 187, 207 103–7, 110, 118–21, 128, 150,
Egypt, 14n6, 16, 78n2, 192 162, 164
Elton, Hugh, 8, 8n16, 9n20, 18n26, relationship with the emperor, 67,
20n35, 20n37–40, 21n41, 68, 79, 83, 89–93, 97–101,
30n85, 50n66, 51, 51n71, 126, 127, 202
52n73, 79n12, 93n64 review of, 83–7, 92
enlisted soldiers Gennadius, 87, 88
desertion, 165, 172 (see also Germanus, Justinian’s cousin, 81n22,
misbehavior) 82, 134, 142, 167, 168, 179, 206
grievances, 151, 152, 169–71, Germanus the duke, 180
177–81, 193 Goths, 35, 38, 40–4, 46–8, 51, 73,
mutiny, 167, 168, 170, 172 (see also 90, 96, 109, 159, 162, 166, 168,
misbehavior) 176, 177, 196
recruitment, 24–8 Gouboulgoudou, 159
224 INDEX
Greatrex, Geoffrey, 8n17, 35, 40n33, Ildiger, 109, 110, 113, 114n54, 120,
59n81, 63n88, 64n89, 67n102, 146, 163n30
68n110, 73n131, 74n134, Illus, 161
75n136, 90n49, 117n73, 156n4, Illyricum, 14, 15, 93, 94, 151–3
186n50, 191n77 imperial bodyguards, 55, 59, 60, 62,
Gregory I, the Great, 49, 55n77, 63, 137, 186, 202
87–9, 97, 183 Indulf, 166, 175n5
guardsmen (bucellarii), 4, 8, 11, 17, influence, 11, 23, 30, 74, 106, 124–6,
18, 18n29, 19, 30, 55, 59, 65, 131, 133n5, 143, 146, 147, 149,
75, 81, 81n21, 92, 104, 107, 152, 203
110, 113, 115, 116, 118, 123, Innocentius, 175, 176
159–65, 167 Isaurians, 20, 48, 161, 162,
Gubazes, 46, 95n74, 191, 207 176, 177
Gurgenes, 81 Italy, 3, 5, 6, 10, 14, 16, 18, 23, 40, 41,
44, 51, 53, 55, 78, 84–8, 90–8,
106–22, 123, 124, 126–8, 135,
H 142, 148, 150, 151, 157, 162,
Haldon, John, 6n5, 13n2, 17n22, 164, 165, 169, 170, 175–7, 190,
20n35, 20n37, 105n8, 162n28 192, 196, 197, 199, 203, 205
Heraclius, 98, 137, 138, 198
Herodian, 114n54, 176
Heruls, 2, 16, 16n17, 40, 43–5, 55, J
58, 65, 66, 68, 69, 69n114, John, the Cappadocian, 5, 52, 191,
73n132, 81n19, 94, 115, 191n82
115n61, 197, 207 John, the Glutton, 72n126, 116, 123,
humiliation, 86, 92, 95, 110, 206 164
Huns, 16, 16n17, 40, 44, 69, 71, 72, John, the nephew of Vitalian, 82n22,
74, 82, 93, 139, 197 107–17, 119, 121, 127, 128,
Hypatius, 135, 192 135, 142, 150–2, 163, 191
John, the son of Sisiniolus, 10, 23n51,
123, 124
I Jones, A.H.M., 13n1, 14n6, 15n8,
identity 17n19, 19, 19n33, 22n46–9,
barbarian, 2, 8, 33–39, 42–49, 70, 23n50, 25, 25n56, 29n79–82,
73, 80, 202 30n87, 41n35, 52n73, 78n1,
continuum of civilization, 37, 39, 41 79n7–10, 80n13, 83n27, 84n29,
cultural, 2, 35, 37, 45, 48, 75, 76 107n15, 126n103, 134n7,
ethnic, 8, 33–5, 35n11, 38, 48, 51, 144n52, 165n38, 170n58,
64 171n62
Roman, 33, 34, 34n5, 35n11, 36, Julian, the emperor, 151, 152
36n17, 37, 39–43, 45–9, 51, Justina, 82n22, 135, 143, 151
54, 57, 59, 63n88, 64, 70, 73, Justin I, 5, 28, 50, 81, 122, 134, 140,
75, 201 205
INDEX 225
Justin II, 6, 7, 23n51, 53, 55, 81n22, Lombards, 35, 38, 46, 53, 55, 183, 206
82, 99, 135, 135n12, 142, 144, loyalty
145 of generals to emperor, 9, 73, 77,
Justin, the general, 108, 110, 111, 97–101, 135, 137, 206
115, 191 of officers to general, 17, 110, 120,
Justin, the son of Germanus, 81n22, 202
89, 135 of soldiers to army, 8, 40, 47, 167,
Justinian I, 1–5, 46, 47, 66–8, 78, 178–81, 196, 204
81–7, 89–93, 95–101, 107, 123, Lydus, John, 48, 48n59, 49n64,
125–7, 134, 138, 142, 151, 169, 191n82
177, 191–4, 198, 206, 207
M
K Magistri militum. See generals
Kaegi, Walter E., 6n5, 104, 104n5, Malalas, John, 7, 15n13, 49n64,
104n6, 112n40, 117n71, 98n79, 122n86, 141, 186
126n105, 127n108, 165n38, Marcellinus, Ammianus, 125, 151n80
177n15 Marcian, 185, 191
Kaldellis, Anthony, 6n6, 7n9, 35n6, Martin, 9, 34, 93–5, 95n74, 110–13,
36, 36n14–17, 37, 37n22, 114n54, 121, 134, 159, 161,
38n24, 39, 39n28, 44n45, 198n107
49n62, 64n89, 66n98, 68n108, Massagetae. See Huns
69n113, 73n129, 73n133, Maurice, 6, 7, 21, 26, 53, 88, 99, 104,
149n73, 156n4 137, 139, 156, 167, 171, 178,
Khusrau I, 4, 34, 90, 134, 176, 182, 180, 197
207 Maximinus, the guardsman, 167
Khusrau II, 139, 196 Menander Protector, 7, 23, 34, 71
Kurs, 71, 71n123, 72, 73n128 Menas, 186
Mesopotamia, 14, 15n13, 53, 56n79,
81, 93, 94, 95n72, 122, 164,
L 197, 198n107
Lazica, 34, 86, 105, 117n75, 142, misbehavior
143, 159, 197, 206, 207 bribery, 29, 166, 168
Lee, A.D., 6n7, 8n16, 20n35, 28n75, desertion, 25, 43n43, 78, 152, 165,
90n50, 91n56, 98n82, 99n83, 172, 175–8, 184, 202
126n103, 127n108, 147n62, harassment of civilians, 11, 97,
147n63, 165n38, 182n32, 184–8, 198, 208
183n38, 188n61, 189, 189n62, mutiny, 6, 43, 89, 123, 166–71,
193n94 178–81, 196
Leo I, 61 treason, 72, 89–93, 97–9, 116
Leontius, 34, 143, 146, 189 Misimians, 61, 147, 161
Liberius, 80, 82, 139 Moors, 43, 48, 53, 159, 167, 168,
limitanei. See armies 171, 175, 178, 179
226 INDEX
Mundilas, 176 Persians, 3–6, 15, 16, 34, 47, 53, 66,
Mundus, 81n19, 94, 185 86, 92–4, 115, 122, 139–42, 157,
162, 180, 182, 184, 197, 205–7
Peter, the general, 10, 72n126, 122,
N 123
Naples, 41n36, 55n77, 88, 157, 161 Peter the Patrician, 144, 145
Narses, the commander, 78n2, 108, Pharas, 2, 44, 64–70, 72–5, 189, 207
115, 117 Phazas, 164
Narses the Eunuch, 2, 4, 5, 9, 16, 18, Philippicus, 157, 160, 162, 180, 190
20, 45, 80, 82, 95, 108, 127, Phocas, 6, 50, 98, 136–8, 167, 169,
139, 158–61, 166, 169, 177, 170, 178, 180, 181, 196–9
178, 190, 192, 195 plague, 3, 5, 25, 52, 92, 95n74, 123,
relationship with Belisarius, 16, 127n107, 141, 177, 194, 197, 206
108–12, 129, 161, 203 Pohl, Walter, 33n1, 35n6, 36n14,
relationship with John, 114, 115, 37n23, 39n27, 46, 51, 72n127,
121, 128, 142 74n135, 75n136
social network of, 70, 71, 78, Praeiecta, 78, 82n22, 89, 135
114–17, 119 prejudice, 40, 59–64, 68, 69, 72–6
Nazares, 190 Priscus, 137, 170, 171, 178, 180
Nika Riot, 4, 90, 93, 96n77, 100, Procopius
135, 185, 186, 192 as a classicizing historian, 23, 69,
North Africa, 3, 5, 14, 15, 43, 52, 69, 108n22, 125
74, 78, 82, 89, 90, 93–5, 97, as a participant in events, 6, 64, 149
106, 121, 123–6, 137, 148, 157, criticism of barbarians, 43, 45, 65, 71
162, 167, 171, 178, 191, 196 tolerance of barbarians, 2, 40, 59,
65–9, 73
opinion of the army, 11, 16, 17, 84,
O 86, 91, 99, 100, 119, 152,
Ognaris, 159 153, 189–95
promotion, 8, 9, 24, 28–31, 56n79,
60, 62, 75, 77–9, 93–5, 121,
P 135, 142, 146, 152, 153, 158,
Patronage. See influence 161, 170, 202, 203
Paucaris, 161 protector, 24, 29, 30, 55, 79
Paulus, the guardsman, 160 Pseudo-Joshua Stylites, 183n38, 184,
Paulus, the officer, 162 187
pay (salary), 17, 25–9, 100, 160, 174,
193–5
arriving late, 165n38, 166, 169, R
170, 176–81, 196 Rance, Philip, 8n16, 20n37, 104,
Pazdernik, Charles, 66, 66n99, 115n60, 156n1, 158n14, 160n22,
67n105, 68n107, 156n4 165n38, 177n15, 194n97
INDEX 227
recruitment, 8, 11, 17, 18, 20, 29, 52, Theodoriscus, 159, 189
55, 177, 197 Theodosius, adopted son of Belisarius
conscription, 25–8, 31, 174 and Antonina, 85, 147, 149
voluntary, 25, 26, 28, 31, 174, 175 Theophylact Simocatta, 7, 23, 49, 71,
Roman identity. See identity 72, 157, 160, 171, 180, 190
Rome, 37, 84, 86, 96, 97, 108n23, Thucydides, 125
118, 150, 159, 162, 163, 166, Tiberius, 6, 7, 137, 197
168–70, 176, 177, 189, 191 Timostratus, 139
Rufinus, 138, 139, 145 Totila, 86, 96, 97, 106n11, 119, 162,
166, 169, 176–8, 183
transfer of generals, 9, 77, 78, 89,
S 93–5, 198, 202
Sapeir, 159 Treadgold, Warren, 6n4, 7n15, 8n16,
Scholasticus, 80 13n2, 14n7, 15n9, 19, 20,
Schor, Adam M., 8, 8n18, 104, 21n42, 24n55, 26, 29n79,
104n4, 118n78 82n26, 106n11, 107n12,
Scott, Roger, 7n12, 141n38, 189n65 122n89, 126n103, 134n9,
Sergius, 10, 95, 97, 121, 123, 124, 156n5, 174n2, 177n15, 179n22,
137, 145, 146, 146n61, 190, 196 189n65, 197n102
Sisifridus, 73, 75 Tribonian, 4, 191
Sittas, 62, 81n21, 128, 190, 196 Troglita, John, 159, 161
Slavs, 55 Tzani, 42
Solomon, 23n51, 43, 95, 121, 145,
146, 171, 189
Soterichus, 146 U
Stein, Ernest, 6n4, 23n52, 61n83 Uliaris, 65, 110–13, 121, 128, 129,
Stotzas, 41n35, 123, 167, 178, 179 168n50
Strategikon, 20n40, 21–4, 30, 104, Ulifus, 166
105, 156 Ulimuth, 159
Suani, 34 Unigastus, 159
Syme, Ronald, 132
symmachoi. See allies
V
Valentinus, 164
T Valerian, 18, 106, 113, 114,
Teall, John L., 8, 9n20, 27, 39n30, 120, 159
52n73, 54n76 Vandals, 5, 9, 18n26, 43, 50, 54, 64,
Theoderic, 18, 42n39, 43, 44, 46, 48, 71, 78n2, 90, 91, 148, 157, 163,
81n19 167, 178, 179
Theodora, 5, 78, 92, 116, 142, Vitalian, 10, 98, 107, 139–42, 145,
148n65, 151, 206 205, 207
Theodore of Sykeon, 185 Vitalius, 23n51, 93, 151, 152
228 INDEX