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    The Age of Faith

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    III. The Earth and Its Life

      IV. Matter and Energy

      V. The Revival of Medicine

      VI. Albertus Magnus

      VII. Roger Bacon

      VIII. The Encyclopedists

      Chapter XXXVIII. THE AGE OF ROMANCE: 1100–1300

      I. The Latin Revival

      II. Wine, Woman, and Song

      III. The Rebirth of Drama

      IV. Epics and Sagas

      V. The Troubadours

      VI. The Minnesingers

      VII. The Romances

      VIII. The Satirical Reaction

      Chapter XXXIX. DANTE: 1265–1321

      I. The Italian Troubadours

      II. Dante and Beatrice

      III. The Poet in Politics

      IV. The Divine Comedy

      1. The Poem

      2. Hell

      3. Purgatory

      4. Heaven

      EPILOGUE: THE MEDIEVAL LEGACY

      Bibliography

      Notes

      Index

      List of Illustrations

      FIG. 1. Interior of Santa Maria Maggiore

      FIG. 2. Interior of Hagia Sophia

      FIG. 3. Interior of San Vitale

      FIG. 4. Detail of Rock Relief

      FIG. 5. Court of the Great Mosque

      FIG. 6. Dome of the Rock

      FIG. 7. Portion of Stone Relief

      FIG. 8. Court of El Azhar Mosque

      FIG. 9. Wood Minbar in El Agsa Mosque

      FIG. 10. Pavilion on Court of Lions, the Alhambra

      FIG. 11. Interior of Mosque

      FIG. 12. Façade of St. Mark’s

      FIG. 13. Piazza of the Duomo, Showing Baptistry, Cathedral, and Leaning Tower

      FIG. 14. Interior of Capella Palatina

      FIG. 15. Apse of Cathedral, Monreale

      FIG. 16. Cimabue: Madonna with Angels and St. Francis

      FIG. 17. Portrait of a Saint, Book of Kells

      FIG. 18. Glass Painting, 12th Century

      FIG. 19. Rose Window, Strasbourg

      FIG. 20. Notre Dame

      FIG. 21. The Virgin of the Pillar

      FIG. 22. Gargoyle

      FIG. 23. Chartres Cathedral, West View

      FIG. 24. “Modesty”

      FIG. 25. “The Visitation”

      FIG. 26. Rheims Cathedral

      FIG. 27. St. Nicaise Between Two Angels

      FIG. 28. “The Annunciation and Visitation”

      FIG. 29. Wrought Iron Grille

      FIG. 30. Canterbury Cathedral

      FIG. 31. Hôtel de Ville

      FIG. 32. Salisbury Cathedral

      FIG. 33. Cathedral Interior, Durham

      FIG. 34. Cathedral Interior, Winchester

      FIG. 35. Westminster Abbey

      FIG. 36. Strasbourg Cathedral

      FIG. 37. “The Church”

      FIG. 38. “The Synagogue”

      FIG. 39. Saint Elizabeth

      FIG. 40. Mary

      FIG. 41. Ekkehard and His Wife Uta

      FIG. 42. Rose Façade, Orvieto Cathedral

      FIG. 43. Façade, Siena Cathedral

      FIG. 44. Pulpit of Pisano

      FIG. 45. Rear View of Cathedral, Salamanca

      FIG. 46. Cathedral Interior, Santiago di Compostela

      All photographs, with the exception of those otherwise marked, were secured through Bettmann Archive.

      BOOK I

      THE BYZANTINE ZENITH

      325–565

      CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE

      Dates of rulers and popes are of their reigns. All dates are A.D.

      226:

      Ardashir founds Sasanian dynasty

      241–72:

      Shapur I of Persia

      251–356:

      St. Anthony of Egypt

      293–373:

      Athanasius

      300–67:

      Hilary of Poitiers

      309–79:

      Shapur II of Persia

      310–400:

      Ausonius, poet

      311–81:

      Ulfilas, apostle to the Goths

      325:

      Council of Nicaea

      325–403:

      Oribasius, physician

      325–91:

      Ammianus Marcellinus, hist’n

      329–79:

      St. Basil

      320–89:

      Gregory Nazianzen

      331:

      B. of Julian the Apostate

      337:

      Death of Constantine

      340–98:

      St. Ambrose

      340–420:

      St. Jerome

      345–407:

      St. John Chrysostom

      345–410:

      Symmachus, senator

      348–410:

      Prudentius, poet

      353–61:

      Constantius sole emperor

      354–430:

      St. Augustine

      359–408:

      Stilicho, patricius

      361–3:

      Julian emperor

      363–4:

      Jovian emperor

      364–7:

      Valentinian I, Western emp.

      364–78:

      Valens Eastern emperor

      365–408:

      Claudian, poet

      366–84:

      Pope Damasus I

      372:

      Huns cross the Volga

      375–83:

      Gratian Western emperor

      378:

      Battle of Hadrianople

      379:

      Theon of Alexandria, math’n

      379–95:

      Theodosius I, emperor

      382–92:

      Affair of Altar of Victory

      383–92:

      Valentinian II, Western emp.

      386–404:

      Jerome’s transl, of Bible

      387:

      Baptism of Augustine

      389–461:

      St. Patrick

      390:

      Penance of Theodosius

      392–4:

      Eugenius Western emperor

      394:

      End of the Olympian Games

      394–423:

      Honorius Western emp.

      395–408:

      Arcadius Eastern emp.

      395–410:

      Alaric I King of Visigoths

      397:

      Confessions of St. Augustine

      c. 400:

      Saturnalia of Macrobius

      402:

      Alaric defeated at Pollentia

      403:

      Ravenna becomes Western capital

      404:

      End of gladiatorial games

      407:

      Roman legions leave Britain

      408–50:

      Theodosius II Eastern emp.

      409:

      Pelagius, theologian

      410:

      Alaric sacks Rome

      410–85:

      Proclus, mathematician

      413:

      Orosius, historian

      413–26:

      Augustine’s City of God

      415:

      Murder of Hypatia

      425:

      University of Constantinople

      425–55:

      Valentinian III Western emp.

      428–31:

      Nestorius patriarch at C’ple

      429:

      Vandals conquer Africa

      431:

      Council of Ephesus

      432–82:

      Sidonius Apollinaris

      432–61:

      St. Patrick in Ireland

      433–54:

      Aëtius patricius

      438:

      Theodosian Code

      439:

      Gaiseric takes Carthage

      440–61:

      Pope Leo I

      440:

      Moses of Chorene, hist’n

      449:

      Anglo-Saxons invade Britain

      450–67:

      Marcian Eastern emp.

      450–550:

      Great age of architecture and mosaic at Ravenna

      451:

     
    ; Attila defeated at Troyes

      452:

      Leo I turns Attila from Rome

      453:

      D. of Attila

      454:

      Valentinian III slays Aëtius

      455:

      Gaiseric sacks Rome

      456:

      Ricimer rules the West

      457–61:

      Majorian Western emp.

      466–83:

      Visigoths conquer Spain

      474–91:

      Zeno Eastern emp.

      475–6:

      Romulus Augustulus

      475–526:

      Theodoric King of Ostrogoths

      475–524:

      Boethius, philosopher

      476:

      End of Western Roman Empire

      480–573:

      Cassiodorus, historian

      481:

      Clovis and the Franks begin conquest of Gaul

      483–531:

      Kavadh I; Mazdakite communism

      490–570:

      Procopius, historian

      491–518:

      Anastasius I Eastern emp.

      493–526:

      Theodoric rules Italy

      525–605:

      Alexander of Tralles, physician

      527–65:

      Justinian I Eastern emp.

      529:

      Justinian closes schools of Athens; St. Benedict founds Monte Cassino

      530–610:

      Fortunatus, poet

      531–79:

      Khosru I of Persia

      532–7:

      Cathedral of St. Sophia

      533:

      Belisarius regains Africa

      535–53:

      The “Gothic War” in Italy

      538–94:

      Gregory of Tours, hist’n

      546–53:

      Totila rules Italy

      552:

      Silk culture introduced into Europe

      570–636:

      Isidore of Seville, encyclopedist

      577:

      Anglo-Saxon victory at Deorham

      589–628:

      Khosru II of Persia

      616:

      Persians conquer Egypt

      637–42:

      Arabs conquer Persia

      641:

      End of Sasanian dynasty

      CHAPTER I

      Julian the Apostate

      332–63

      I. THE LEGACY OF CONSTANTINE

      IN the year 335 the Emperor Constantine, feeling the nearness of death, called his sons and nephews to his side, and divided among them, with the folly of fondness, the government of the immense Empire that he had won. To his eldest son, Constantine II, he assigned the West—Britain, Gaul, and Spain; to his son Constantius, the East—Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt; to his youngest son, Constans, North Africa, Italy, Illyricum, and Thrace, including the new and old capitals—Constantinople and Rome; and to two nephews Armenia, Macedonia, and Greece. The first Christian Emperor had spent his life, and many another, in restoring the monarchy, and unifying the faith, of the Roman Empire; his death (337) risked all. He had a hard choice: his rule had not acquired the sanctity of time, and could not ensure the peaceable succession of a sole heir; divided government seemed a lesser evil than civil war.

      Civil war came none the less, and assassination simplified the scene. The army rejected the authority of any but Constantine’s sons; all other male relatives of the dead Emperor were murdered, except his nephews Gallus and Julian; Gallus was ill, and gave promise of an early death; Julian was five, and perhaps the charm of his age softened the heart of Constantius, whom tradition and Ammianus credited with these crimes.1 Constantius renewed with Persia that ancient war between East and West which had never really ceased since Marathon, and allowed his brothers to eliminate one another in fraternal strife. Left sole Emperor (353), he returned to Constantinople, and governed the reunified realm with dour integrity and devoted incompetence, too suspicious to be happy, too cruel to be loved, too vain to be great.

      The city that Constantine had called Nova Roma, but which even in his lifetime had taken his name, had been founded on the Bosporus by Greek colonists about 657 B.C. For almost a thousand years it had been known as Byzantium; and Byzantine would persist as a label for its civilization and its art. No site on earth could have surpassed it for a capital; at Tilsit, in 1807, Napoleon would call it the empire of the world, and would refuse to yield it to a Russia fated by the direction of her rivers to long for its control. Here at any moment the ruling power could close a main door between East and West; here the commerce of continents would congregate, and deposit the products of a hundred states; here an army might stand poised to drive back the gentlemen of Persia, the Huns of the East, the Slavs of the North, and the barbarians of the West. The rushing waters provided defense on every side but one, which could be strongly walled; and in the Golden Horn—a quiet inlet of the Bosporus—war fleets and merchantmen might find a haven from attack or storm. The Greeks called the inlet Keras, horn, possibly from its shape; golden was later added to suggest the wealth brought to this port in fish and grain and trade. Here, amid a population predominantly Christian, and long inured to Oriental monarchy and pomp, the Christian emperor might enjoy the public support withheld by Rome’s proud Senate and pagan populace. For a thousand years the Roman Empire would here survive the barbarian floods that were to inundate Rome; Goths, Huns, Vandals, Avars, Persians, Arabs, Bulgarians, Russians would threaten the new capital in turn and fail; only once in that millennium would Constantinople be captured—by Christian Crusaders loving gold a little better than the cross. For eight centuries after Mohammed it would hold back the Moslem tide that would sweep over Asia, Africa, and Spain. Here beyond all expectation Greek civilization would display a saving continuity, tenaciously preserve its ancient treasures, and transmit them at last to Renaissance Italy and the Western world.

      In November 324 Constantine the Great led his aides, engineers, and priests from the harbor of Byzantium across the surrounding hills to trace the boundaries of his contemplated capital. Some marveled that he took in so much, but “I shall advance,” he said, “till He, the invisible God who marches before me, thinks proper to stop.”2 He left no deed undone, no word unsaid, that could give to his plan, as to his state, a deep support in the religious sentiments of the people and in the loyalty of the Christian Church.

      “In obedience to the command of God,”3 he brought in thousands of workmen and artists to raise city walls, fortifications, administrative buildings, palaces, and homes; he adorned the squares and streets with fountains and porticoes, and with famous sculptures conscripted impartially from a hundred cities in his realm; and to divert the turbulence of the populace he provided an ornate and spacious hippodrome where the public passion for games and gambling might vent itself on a scale paralleled only in degenerating Rome. The New Rome was dedicated as capital of the Eastern Empire on May 11, 330—a day that was thereafter annually celebrated with imposing ceremony. Paganism was officially ended; the Middle Ages of triumphant faith were, so to speak, officially begun. The East had won its spiritual battle against the physically victorious West, and would rule the Western soul for a thousand years.

      Within two centuries of its establishment as a capital, Constantinople became, and for ten centuries remained, the richest, most beautiful, and most civilized City in the world. In 337 it contained some 50,000 people; in 400 some 100,000; in 500 almost a million.4 An official document (c. 450) lists five imperial palaces, six palaces for the ladies of the court, three for high dignitaries, 4388 mansions, 322 streets, 52 porticoes; add to these a thousand shops, a hundred places of amusement, sumptuous baths, brilliantly ornamented churches, and magnificent squares that were veritable museums of the art of the classic world.5 On the second of the hills that lifted the city above its encompassing waters lay the Forum of Constantine, an elliptical space entered under a triumphal arch at either end; porticoes and statuary formed its circumference; on the north side stood a stately se
    nate house; at the center rose a famous porphyry pillar, 120 feet high, crowned with the figure of Apollo, and ascribed to Pheidias himself.*

      From the Forum a broad Mese or Middle Way, lined with palaces and shops, and shaded with colonnades, led westward through the city to the Augusteum, a plaza a thousand by three hundred feet, named after Constantine’s mother Helena as Augusta. At the north end of this square rose the first form of St. Sophia—Church of the Holy Wisdom; on the east side was a second senate chamber; on the south stood the main palace of the emperor, and the gigantic public Baths of Zeuxippus, containing hundreds of statues in marble or bronze; at the west end a vaulted monument—the Milion or Milestone—marked the point from which radiated the many magnificent roads (some still functioning) that bound the provinces to the capital. Here, too, on the west of the Augusteum, lay the great Hippodrome. Between this and St. Sophia the imperial or Sacred Palace spread, a complex structure of marble surrounded by 150 acres of gardens and porticoes. Here and there and in the suburbs were the mansions of the aristocracy. In the narrow, crooked, congested side streets were the shops of the tradesmen, and the homes or tenements of the populace. At its western terminus the Middle Way opened through the “Golden Gate”—in the Wall of Constantine—upon the Sea of Marmora. Palaces lined the three shores, and trembled with reflected glory in the waves.

     

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