The Life Of Constantine, By Eusebius, Together With The Oration Of Constantine To The Assembly Of The Saints, And The Oration Of Eusebius In Praise Of Constantine
I
Constantine the Great
Chapter I
Life
S:1.
Early Years
The Emperor Flavius Valerius Constantinus,
surnamed the Great, born February 27, 272 or 274, at Naissus, was
son of Constantius Chlorus, afterwards Emperor, and Helena his
wife. He was brought up at Drepanum, his mother's home, where he
remained until his father became Caesar (a.d. 292 acc. to
Clinton) and divorced Helena (Anon. Vales. p. 471). He was then
sent to the court of Diocletian, nominally to be educated
(Praxagoras, in Mueller, Fragm. 4 (1868); Zonar. 13. 1, &c.),
but really as hostage, and remained with Diocletian, or Galerius,
until the year 306. During this time he took part in various
campaigns, including the famous Egyptian expedition of Diocletian
in 296 (Euseb. V. C. 1. 19; Anon. Metroph., Theoph. p. 10).
Shortly after joining the emperor he contracted (296 or 297) his
alliance with Minervina, by whom he had a son, Crispus. He was at
Nicomedia when Diocletian's palace was struck by lightning
(Const. Orat. 35), and was present at the abdication of
Diocletian and Maximinus in 305 (Lact. De M. P. c. 18 sq.). This
last event proved a crisis for Constantine. He had grown to be a
man of fine physique (Lact. c. 18; Euseb. V. C. 1. 19), of proved
courage and military skill (cf. remarks on physical
characteristics under Character), and a general favorite (Lact.
l.c.). He had already "long before" (Lact. c. 18) been created
Tribune of the first order. It was both natural and fitting that
at this time he should become Caesar in the place of his father,
who became Augustus. Every one supposed he would be chosen (c.
19), and Diocletian urged it (c. 18), but the princely youth was
too able and illustrious to please Galerius, and Constantine was
set aside for obscure and incompetent men (cf. Lact.). His
position was far from easy before. His brilliant parts naturally
aroused the jealousy and suspicions of the emperors. They, or at
least Galerius, even sought his death, it is said, by tempting
him to fight wild beasts (a lion, Praxag. p. 3; cf. Zonaras 2, p.
623), or exposing him to special danger in battle (cf. Philistog.
1. 6; Lact. c. 24; Anon. Vales. p. 471; Theophanes p. 10-12,
&c.). The situation, hard enough before, now became, we may
well believe, intolerable. He was humiliated, handicapped, and
even in danger of his life. He was practically a prisoner. The
problem was, how to get away. Several times Constantius asked
that his son might be allowed to join him, but in vain (Lact. c.
24; Anon. Vales. p. 471). Finally, however, Constantine gained a
grudging permission to go. It was given at night, and the emperor
intended to take it back in the morning (Lact. c. 24). But in the
morning it was too late. Constantine had left at once to join his
father. He lost no time either in starting or making the journey.
Each relay of post horses which he left was maimed to baffle
pursuit (Anon. Vales., Vict. Epit. p. 49; cf. Lact. c. 24,
Praxag. p. 3). The rage of the emperor when he learned of the
flight was great but vain. Constantine was already out of reach,
and soon joined his father at Bononia (Boulogne, Anon. Vales.;
cf. Eumen. Paneg. (310), c. 7), just in time to accompany him on
his final expeditions to Britain (Eumen. Paneg. (310) c. 7; cf.
Anon. Vales. l.c.). Constantius died shortly after at York (Anon.
Vales. p. 471; Eutrop. 10. 1), having named Constantine as his
successor (Euseb. V. C. 1. 21; Eumen. Paneg. (310) c. 7.; Lact.
c. 24).
S:2. The
First Five Years of Reign
The will of the father was promptly
ratified by the soldiers, who at once proclaimed Constantine
Augustus. Supported by them, and also by Erocus, king of the
Allemanni (Vict. Epit. p. 49-50), he sent his portrait to
Galerius, claiming the title of Augustus. This the emperor
refused to grant, but, much against his will, allowed him to have
the title of Caesar (Lact. c. 25). Constantine did not insist on
his right to the greater title, but waited his time, and in the
interim contented himself with the lesser,-as the coins show.
There was enough to do. After his father's death he waged war
against the Francs, and later against the Bructeri and others
(Eutrop. 10. 3; Paneg. (307) c. 4; Eumen. Paneg. (310) cc. 10-12;
Nazar. Paneg. (321) 18; Euseb. V. C. 1. 25, &c.; cf. Inscr.
ap. Clinton 2. 93), and celebrated his victories by exposing his
captives to the wild beasts (Eutrop. 10. 3; Eumen. Paneg. (310)
c. 12; Paneg. (313) c. 23; cf. Nazar. Paneg. (321) c.
16).
Meanwhile affairs were marching at Rome,
too. The same year (306) that Constantine was elected Augustus by
the soldiers, Maxentius at Rome was proclaimed emperor by the
Pretorian Guards (Eutrop. 10. 2; Vict. Caes. p. 156; Anon. Vales.
p. 472; Zos. 2. 9; Socr. 1. 2; Oros. c. 26, &c.; Lact. c.
26). He persuaded the willing (Eutrop. 10. 2) Maximian to resume
the imperial purple (Lact. c. 26; Zos. 2. 10), but soon quarreled
with him (Socr. 1. 2; Eutrop. 10. 3; Zos. 2. 11; Lact. c. 28). In
307 Constantine and Maximinus were named "sons of the emperors,"
and the following year were reluctantly acknowledged as emperors
by Galerius. Maximian, after he had quarreled with his son,
betook himself to Gaul and made alliance with Constantine by
giving his daughter Fausta in marriage (307). He proved an
uncomfortable relative. The much-abused mother-in-law of fiction
is not to be compared with this choice father-in-law of history.
First he tried to supersede Constantine by corrupting his
soldiers. At his persuasion Constantine had left behind the bulk
of his army while he made a campaign on the frontier. As soon as
he was supposably out of the way, the soldiers were won by
largesses, and Maximian assumed the purple again. But he had
reckoned without his host. Constantine acted with decisive
promptness, returned by such rapid marches that he caught
Maximian entirely unprepared (Lact. c. 29) and drove him into
Marseilles, where the latter cursed him vigorously from the walls
(Lact. c. 29), but was able to offer no more tangible resistance.
The gates were thrown open (Lact. c. 29), and Maximian was in the
power of Constantine, who this time spared his precious
father-in-law. Grateful for this mildness, Maximian then plotted
to murder him. The plan was for Fausta to leave her husband's
door open and for Maximian to enter and kill Constantine with his
own hands. Fausta pretended to agree, but told her husband (Zos.
2. 11; Joh. Ant. p. 603; Oros. c. 28), who put a slave in his own
place (but apparently did not "put himself in the place of" the
slave), had the program been carried out, and catching Maximian
in the act, granted him that supreme ancient mercy,-the right to
choose how he would die (Lact. c. 30).
Though in the midst of wars and plots, and
liable at any time to have to run from one end of his province to
the other to put down some insurrection, Constantine kept
steadily at the work of internal improvement, organizing the
interior, fortifying the boundaries, building bridges, restoring
cities, building up educational institutions, &c. At the end
of five years' reign (July 24, 311) he had reduced the turbulent
tribes, organized his affairs, and endeared himself to his
people, especially to the Christians, whom he had favored from
the first (Lact. c. 24), and who could hardly fail in those days
of persecution to rejoice in a policy such as is indicated in his
letter to Maximinus Daza in behalf of persecuted Christians
(Lact, c. 37).
S:3.
State of Affairs in 311
In the meantime, while the extreme west of
the empire was enjoying the mild rule of Constantine, the other
corners of the now quadrangular and now hexagonal world, over
which during this time Maximinus, Galerius, Licinius, Maximian,
and Maxentius had tried to reign, had had a much less comfortable
time. Every emperor wanted a corner to himself, and, having his
corner, wanted that of some one else or feared that some one else
wanted his. In order clearly to understand Constantine, a glimpse
of the state of affairs in these other parts of the empire,
together with some idea of the kind of men with whom he had to
deal is essential, and may be gotten from a brief view of (1) The
rulers, (2) Characters of the rulers, (3) Condition of the
ruled.
I. The Rulers.
The intricate process of evolution and
devolution of emperors, mysterious to the uninitiated as a
Chinese puzzle, is briefly as follows: In 305 Diocletian and
Maximian had abdicated (Lact. c. 18; Eutrop. 9. 27; Vict. Caes.),
Galerius and Constantius succeeding as Augusti and Severus,
Maximinus Daza succeeding them as Caesars (Lact. c. 19). In 306
Constantius died, Constantine was proclaimed Augustus by his
army, Maxentius by the Pretorian Guards (cf. above), and Severus
by Galerius (Lact. c. 25), while Maximian resumed the purple (see
above)-four emperors, Galerius, Severus, Maximian, and Maxentius,
with two Caesars, Constantine and Maximinus, one with a pretty
definite claim to the purple, and the other bound not to be left
out in the cold. In 307 Licinius was appointed Augustus by
Galerius (Lact. c. 29; Vict. Caes.; Zos. 2. 11; Anon. Vales.;
Eutrop. 10. 4), who also threw a sop to Cerberus by naming
Constantine and Maximin "sons of emperors" (Lact. c. 32; Coins in
Eckhel 8 (1838) 52. 3). Constantine was given title of Augustus
by Maximianus (?), and Maximinus about this time was forced, as
he said, by his army to assume the title. Meantime the growing
procession of emperors was reduced by one. Severus, sent against
Maxentius, was deserted by his soldiers, captured, and slain in
307 (Lact. c. 26; Zos. 2. 10; Anon. Vales.; Eutrop. 10. 2; Vict.
Caes. &c. &c.), leaving still six emperors or
claimants,-Galerius, Licinius, Maxentius, Maximian, Maximinus,
and Constantine. In 308, making the best of a bad matter,
Galerius appointed Constantine and Maximin Augusti (see above),
leaving the situation unchanged, and so it remained until the
death of Maximian in 310 (see above), and of Galerius in May, 311
(Lact. c. 33; Vict. Caes., Vict. Epit.; Zos. 2. 11) reduced the
number to four.
II. Characters of the Rulers.
Constantine's own character has been hinted
at and will be studied later. Severus was the least significant
of the others, having a brief reign and being little mentioned by
historians. Diocletian's characterization of him was, according
to Lactantius (c. 18), as ejaculated to Galerius, "That dancing,
carousing drunkard who turns night into day and day into night."
The average character of the other emperors was that of the
prisoners for life in our modern state prisons. Galerius, "that
pernicious wild beast" (Lact. c. 25), was uneducated, drunken
(Anon. Vales. p. 472); fond of boasting himself to be the
illegitimate son of a dragon (Lact. 9; Vict. Epit. p. 49), and
sanguinary and ferocious to an extraordinary degree (Lact. c. 9.
21, 22, &c.). Licinius, characterized by "ingratitude" and
"cold-blooded ferocity," was "not only totally indifferent to
human life and suffering, and regardless of any principle of law
or justice which might interfere with the gratification of his
passions, but he was systematically treacherous and cruel,
possessed of not one redeeming quality save physical courage and
military skill" (Ramsay, in Smith Dict. 2, p. 784; compare Euseb.
H. E. 10. 8; V. C. 1. 49-56), and "in avaricious cupidity worst
of all" (Vict. Epit. p. 51). Maximinus' character "stands forth
as pre-eminent for brutal licentiousness and ferocious
cruelty-lust hard by hate'" (Plumptre, in Smith & W. 3, p.
872), and according to Lactantius, c. 38, "that which
distinguished his character and in which he transcended all
former emperors was his desire of debauching women." He was
cruel, superstitious, gluttonous, rapacious, and "so addicted to
intoxication that in his drunken frolics he was frequently
deranged and deprived of his reason like a madman" (Euseb. H. E.
8. 14). Maximianus has been thought to be on the whole the least
outrageous, and his somewhat defective moral sense respecting
treachery and murder has been noted (cf. above). He has been
described as "thoroughly unprincipled . . . base and cruel"
(Ramsay, in Smith Dict. 2, p. 981). He is described by Victor,
(Epit. p. 48) as "ferus natura, ardens libidine," being addicted
to extraordinary and unnatural lust (Lact. c. 8). Truly a choice
"best" in this rogues' gallery. Of Maxentius it is said
(Tyrwhitt, in Smith & W. 3, p. 865): "His wickedness seems to
have transcended description, and to have been absolutely
unredeemed by any saving feature." He "left no impurity or
licentiousness untouched" (Euseb. H. E. 8. 14; cf. Eutrop. 10. 4;
Lact. 9). He was marked by "impiety," "cruelty," "lust," and
tyranny (Paneg. c. 4). He was the most disreputable of
all,-unmitigatedly disreputable. With all due allowance for the
prejudice of Christian historians, from whom such strong
statements are mainly drawn, yet enough of the details are
confirmed by Victor, Epit., the Panegyrists, Eutropius, and other
non-Christian writers to verify the substantial facts of the
ferocity, drunkenness, lust, covetousness, and oppression of this
precious galaxy of rulers.
III. Condition of the Ruled.
Under such rulers there was a reign of
terror during this period which contrasted strangely with the
state of things under Constantine. Galerius was "driving the
empire wild with his taxations" (cf. Lact. c. 23 and 26),
affording in this also a marked contrast with the course of
Constantine in Gaul. Maxentius led in the unbridled exercise of
passion (Euseb. H. E. 8. 14; cf. Lact. c. 18), but in this he
differed from the others little except in degree (compare Euseb.
V. C. 1. 55 on Licinius), and according to Lactantius (c. 28) he
was surpassed by Maximin. In brief, all did according to their
own sweet wills, and the people had to stand it as best they
could. The worst was that the oppression did not end with the
emperors nor the friends and officials to whom they delegated
power to satisfy their desires at the expense of the helpless.
Their armies were necessary to them. The soldiers had to be
conciliated and exactions made to meet their demands. They
followed the examples of their royal leaders in all manner of
excesses and oppressions. No property or life or honor was
safe.
The persecution of the Christians reached a
climax of horror in this period. The beginning of the tenth
persecution was, to be sure, a little before this (303), but its
main terror was in this time. Galerius and Maximian are said
indeed to have persecuted less during this period, and Maxentius
not at all; but Galerius was the real author and sanguinary
promoter of the persecution which is ascribed to Diocletian
(Lact. c. 11), while Maximian was, in 304, the author of the
celebrated "Fourth Edict" which made death the penalty of
Christianity, and Maxentius was only better because impartial-he
persecuted both Christian and heathen (Euseb. V. C. 1. 33-6; H.
E. 8. 14; Eutrop. 10. 4). The persecution under Maximin was of
peculiar atrocity (Euseb. H. E. 8. 17; 9. 6, &c.; Lact. c.
26-27), so that the whole of this period in the East, excepting a
slight breathing space in 308, was a terror to Christians, and it
is said that "these two years were the most prolific of bloodshed
of any in the whole history of Roman persecutions" (Marriott, in
Smith & W. 2, p. 594). It was not until the very end of this
period that Galerius, in terror of death, issued the famous first
edict of toleration. Such was the condition of things in July,
311. The deaths of Severus in 307, Maximian in 310, and Galerius
in 311, had cleared the stage so far as to leave but four
Augusti, Licinius and Maximin in the East, Constantine and
Maxentius in the West. The only well-ordered and contented
section of the world was that of Constantine. In all the others
there was oppression, excess, and discontent, the state of things
at Rome being on the whole the most outrageous.
S:4.
Second Five Years
This period was most momentous for the
world's history. Maxentius, seeking an excuse for war against
Constantine, found it in a pretended desire to avenge his father
(Zos. 2. 14), and prepared for war. Like his father before him,
however, he did not know his man. Constantine's mind was
prepared. He was alert and ready to act. He gathered all the
forces, German, Gallic, and British (Zos. 2. 15) that he could
muster, left a portion for the protection of the Rhine, entered
Italy by way of the Alps (Paneg.), and marched to meet the much
more numerous forces of Maxentius,-Romans, Italians, Tuscans,
Carthagenians, and Sicilians (Zos. 2. 15). First Sigusium was
taken by storm (Naz. Paneg. c. 17 and 21; Paneg. c. 5); then the
cavalry of Maxentius was defeated at Turin (Naz. Paneg. c. 22;
Paneg. c. 6). After a few days' rest in Milan (Paneg. c. 7) he
continued his triumphant march, defeating the enemy again in a
cavalry engagement at Brescia (Naz. Paneg. c. 25), and taking the
strongly fortified Verona after a hard-fought battle before the
walls (Anon. Vales. p. 473; Paneg.; Naz. Paneg. c. 25-26). This
had taken him out of his way a little; but now there were no
enemies in the rear, and he was free to push on to Rome, on his
way whither, if not earlier, he had his famous vision of the
cross. He reached the Tiber October 26. Maxentius, tempted by a
dubious oracle issued from Rome, crossed the Tiber, and joined
battle. His apparently unwise action in staking so much on a
pitched battle has its explanation, if we could believe Zosimus
(2. 15), Eusebius (V. C. 1. 38), Praxagoras, and others. His
object was, it is said, by a feigned retreat to tempt Constantine
across the bridge of boats which he had built in such a way that
it could be broken, and the enemy let into the river. If it was a
trick, he at least fell into his own pit. The dissipated soldiers
of Maxentius gave way before the hardy followers of Constantine,
fired by his own energy and the sight of the cross. The defeat
was a rout. The bridge broke. Maxentius, caught in the jam, was
cast headlong into the river (Anon. Val. p. 473; Lact. c. 44;
Chron. Pasch. p. 521, &c.); and after a vain attempt to climb
out on the steep bank opposite (Paneg. c. 17), was swept away by
the stream. The next day his body was found, the head cut off
(Praxag.; Anon. Vales. p. 473), and carried into the city (Anon.
Vales. p. 473) on the point of a spear (Paneg. c. 18; Zos. 2. 17;
Praxag. p. 1). Constantine entered the city in triumph amid
rejoicings of the people, exacted penalties from a few of those
most intimate with Maxentius (Zos. 2. 17), disbanded the
Praetorian Guards (Vict. Caes. p. 159; Zos. 2. 17), raised a
statue to himself, and did many other things which are recorded;
and if he did as many things which are not recorded as there are
recorded things which he did not do, he must have been very busy
in the short time he remained there.
Constantine was now sole emperor in the
West, and the emperors were reduced to three. History was making
fast. After a very brief stay in Rome he returned to Milan (Lact.
c. 45), where Licinius met him (Anon. Vales. p. 473; Lact. c. 25;
Vict. Epit. p. 50; Zos. 2. 17, &c.). It had become of mutual
advantage to these emperors to join alliance. So a betrothal had
been made, and now the marriage of Licinius to the sister of
Constantine was celebrated (cf. refs. above Lact.; Vict.; Zos.;
Anon. Vales.). At the same time the famous Second Edict or Edict
of Milan was drawn up by the two emperors (Euseb. H. E. 10. 5;
Lact. c. 48), and probably proclaimed. Constantine then returned
to Gaul (Anon. Vales. p. 473; Zos. 11. 17), where he was forced
into another sort of strenuous warfare-the ecclesiastical, taking
a hand somewhat against his will in trying to settle the famous
Donatist schism.
Licinius had a more critical problem to
meet. Maximin thought it a good time to strike while Licinius was
off in Milan engaged in festivities (Lact. c. 45); but the
latter, hastily gathering his troops and pushing on by forced
marches, met near Heraclea and utterly defeated him (Lact. c.
46). Maximin fled precipitately, escaping the sword only to die a
more terrible death that same summer (Lact. c. 49; Euseb. V. C.
1. 58; cf. Zos. 2. 17). The death of Maximin cleared the field
still farther. Through progressive subtractions the number of
emperors had been reduced to two,-one in the East and one in the
West.
They, too, promptly fell out. The next year
they were at war. Causes and pretexts were various; but the
pretext, if not the cause, was in general that Licinius proved an
accomplice after the fact, at least, to a plot against
Constantine. Whatever the immediate cause, it was one of the
inevitabilities of fate. Another vigorous campaign followed,
characterized by the same decisive action and personal courage on
the part of Constantine which he had already shown, and which
supplied his lack of soldiers. First at Cibalis in Pannonia (Oct.
8), then in a desperate battle at Mardia, Licinius was defeated
and forced to make peace (Anon. Vales. p. 474; Zos. 2. 19-20).
The world was re-divided between the affectionate
brothers-in-law, and Constantine took Illyrium to his other
possessions. After this battle and the re-division there was a
truce between the emperors for some years, during the early part
of which (in 316 or 315) the Decennalia of Constantine were
celebrated (Euseb. V. C. 1. 48).
S:5.
Third Five Years
About the time of his decennial
celebration, his sons Crispus and Constantine, and Licinius, son
of Licinius, were made Caesars. The peace between the emperors
continued during the whole of this period. There was more or less
fighting with the frontier tribes, Crispus, e.g., defeating the
Franks in 320 (Naz. Paneg. c. 3. 17?), but the main interest of
the period does not lie in its wars. It was a period of
legislation and internal improvement (cf. Laws of 319, 320, 321,
collected in Clinton, 1, p. 9; also De Broglie, I. 1, 296-97).
Early in the period he was at Milan, where the Donatist matter,
which had been dragging along since 311, came up for final
settlement (cf. note, above). He was also at one time or another
at Arles and at Rome, but the latter and greater part of the
period was spent mainly in Dacia and Pannonia (cf. Laws, as
above). The close of his fifteen years was celebrated somewhat
prematurely at Rome, in the absence of Constantine, by the
oration of Nazarius (cf. Naz. Paneg.).
S:6.
Fourth Five Years
If the third period was relatively quiet
the fourth was absolutely stirring. There had undoubtedly been
more or less fighting along the Danube frontier during the
preceding years, but early in this period there was a most
important campaign against the Sarmatians, in which they were
defeated and their king taken prisoner. In honor of this victory
coins were struck (Eckhel, Doct. Num. Vet. 8 (1827) 87). But this
was only skirmishing; afterwards came the tug of war. Nine years
of peace proved the utmost limit of mutual patience, and
Constantine and Licinius came to words, and from words to blows.
For a long time Constantine had been vexed at the persecution of
the Christians by Licinius (cf. Euseb. H. E. 10. 8, 9),
persecutions waged perhaps with the express purpose of
aggravating him. Licinius, on the other hand, naturally chagrined
over the previous loss of territory, knowing of Constantine's
indignation over his persecutions, and perhaps suspecting him of
further designs, was naturally suspicious when Constantine passed
within his boundaries in pursuing the Sarmatians (Anon. Vales. p.
474). Mutual recriminations and aggravations followed. Licinius
would not let the Sarmatian coins pass current and had them
melted down (Anon. Contin. Dio. Cass., in Mueller, Fragm. Hist.
Gr. 4 199). Altogether they soon came to blows. The steps were
short, sharp, decisive. Constantine defeated Licinius by land
(July 3, 323), and through Crispus, by sea (Soz. 1. 7; Anon.
Vales. p. 474-5; Zos. 2. 22-3). After the defeat at Adrianople,
Licinius retreated to Byzantium (Zos. 2. 23-5; Vict. Epit. p.
50), and then to Chalcedon (Anon. Vales. p. 475, Zos. 2. 25-6).
Two months after the first victory (Sept. 18) a final and
decisive battle was fought at Chrysopolis (Anon. Vales. p. 475;
Socr. 1. 4). Licinius surrendered on condition that his life
should be spared (Zos. 2. 28), or rather Constantia secured from
her brother the promise that his life should be spared (Anon.
Vales. p. 475; Vict. Epit. p. 50; Pseudo-Leo, p. 85, &c.). He
retired to Nicomedia, residing at Thessalonica (Soz. 1. 7;
Pseudo-Leo, &c.), but was put to death the following year.
Constantine was now sole emperor. His first act (Soz. 1. 8) was
to issue a proclamation in favor of the Christians (Soz. l.c.; V.
C. 2. 24- , and 48- ). This was followed by many other acts in
their favor,-building of churches, &c. (cf. Euseb. V. C., and
notes). From this time on he was much identified with Christian
affairs, and the main events are given in extenso by Eusebius
(see various notes). In 325 (June 19-Aug. 25) the Council of
Nicaea was held (cf. Euseb. V. C. 3. 6, and notes), and
Constantine took an active part in its proceedings. The same year
his Vicennalia were celebrated at Nicomedia (Euseb. V. C. 1. 1;
Hieron.; Cassiod.) and the following year at Rome also (Hieron.,
Cassiod., Prosper, Idat.), Constantine being present at both
celebrations, being thus at Rome in July, and passing during the
year as far as Arles, apparently spending some time at Milan (cf.
the various laws in Clinton, v. 2, p. 92).
S:7.
Fifth Five Years
The beginning of this period was the
beginning of the series of acts which have taken most from the
reputation of Constantine. Sometime in 326, perhaps while at
Rome, he ordered the death of his son Crispus. The same year
(Hieron. Chron.) the Caesar Licinius, his sister's son, was put
to death (Eutrop. 10. 6; Hieron.; Prosper.), and shortly after
his wife Fausta died or was put to death. But apart from this
shadow, the period was hardly less brilliant, in its way, than
preceding ones. It was a time of gigantic and, as some said,
extravagant internal improvements. Among various enterprises was
the refounding, in 327, of Drepanum, his mother's city, as
Helenopolis (Hieron. An. 2343; Chron. Pasch. p. 283(?); Socr. H.
E. 1. 18; Soz. 2. 2; Theoph. p. 41), and greatest of all, the
transformation of the insignificant Byzantium into the
magnificent Constantinople, which was dedicated in 330 (Idatius;
Chron. Pasch. p. 285; Hesych. S:42; Hieron.; cf. Clinton). It was
probably during this period, too, that the work of improvement in
Jerusalem was undertaken, and Helena made her famous visit
thither (Euseb. V. C. 3. 42; Soz. 21; Socr. 1. 17; Ephraem. p.
24: Theoph. 37-8, &c.).
S:8.
Sixth Five Years
The main event of the last full five-year
period of this reign was the Gothic war (Hieron. An. 2347; Idat.;
Oros. c. 28; Anon. Vales. p. 476; Eutrop. 10. 7; Vict. Caes. p.
352; cf. Soz. 1. 26), undertaken in behalf of the Sarmatians
(Anon. Vales. l.c.), carried on by Constantine II., and brought
to an end April 20, 332 (cf. Clinton). The following year (333)
Constans was made consul (Idat.; Hieron.; Prosper has 332; cf.
Zos. 2. 35; Vict. Caes. p. 161, &c.), and in 334 the
remarkable (Anon. Vales.) incorporation of 300,000 Sarmatians
into the empire (Anon. Vales. p. 476; Idat.; Hieron.; cf. Ammian.
17. 12, 18; 17. 13; 19. 12; V. C. 4. 6). This same year
Calocaerus revolted in Crete and was defeated (Anon. Vales. p.
476; Vict. Caes. p. 161; Oros. c. 28; Hieron.). The following
year (335) Constantine celebrated his tricennalia, and Dalmatius
was made Caesar (Idat.; Hieron. An. 340; Vict. Caes. p. 161;
Anon. Vales. p. 476; Chron. Pasch. p. 532; Vict. Epit. p. 51;
Oros. c. 28), making now four Caesars and a nondescript (cf.
Anon. Vales. p. 476),-Constantine II, Constantius, Constans,
Dalmatius, and Hannibalianus, among whom the world was now
partitioned (Anon. Vales. p. 476; Zos. 2. 39; Vict. Epit. p.
52).
S:9.
Last Years
Later in this year, Constantine is known to
have been at Jerusalem, where he dedicated a church (V. C. 4. 40;
Chron. Pasch., but wrong year). It was also the year of the
Synods of Tyre (Athanas. c. Ar. 1. p. 788; V. C. 4. 41; Theod. 1.
28). The same year, or early in the following one, Eusebius
pronounced his tricennial oration (see Special Prolegomena). In
337 the Great Emperor died at Ancyrona, near Nicomedia, just as
he was preparing for an expedition against the Persians, and was
buried in the Church of the Apostles, at Constantinople (cf.
notes on Eusebius' Life of Constantine).
Chapter II
Character
S:1.
Introduction
A man's character consists of an inherited
personality enlarged, modified, or disfigured by his own repeated
voluntary acts. A sufficiently exhaustive survey of such
character may be made under the rubrics of: 1. Inherited
characteristics. 2. Physical characteristics. 3. Mental
characteristics. 4. Moral characteristics. 5. Religious
characteristics.
The character of Constantine has been so
endlessly treated, with such utter lack of agreement, that it
seems hopeless to try to reach any clear results in a study of
it. "Who shall decide when doctors disagree?" "How shall I go
about it to find what sort of a man Constantine really was?"
Certainly nothing can be gained by that method which chooses a
few acts or characteristics to which shifting tests of various
philosophies are applied. Nor can any haphazard selection and
stringing together of traits give what is by its nature a
synthesis of them all. Like any other scientific study, the first
condition of method is that it be systematic. Then, a character
generalization is worth just so much, no more, as the grounds on
which it is based. To get a man's character from secondary
sources, from other men's generalizations, is a hopelessly
will-of-the-wisp effort. Again, another vice of characterization
as usually practised is the interpretation of the whole by a part
rather than the part by the whole. The individual act is thus
made the standard of character. To get at what this personality
called Constantine was therefore requires a systematic survey of
the primary sources with a view to getting the ensemble that the
eccentric may be judged by the normal. In such survey the main
thing is the body of analyzed and grouped facts. The editor's
summary, like any summary, is worth only what the facts are
worth. This method, however imperfectly carried out, is at least
better than rambling observations of incoherent phenomena; and
has therefore been adopted in this attempt to find out what sort
of a man this Constantine was; Physically, Mentally, Morally,
Spiritually.
S:2.
Inherited Characteristics
The fact of the inheritance of character,
virtues or vices as the case may be, curiously recognized in
various nations and ancient philosophies (cf. Ribot. Heredity,
N.Y. 1875, p. 375-6), and even in the ten commandments, has
received the clearer exposition of modern science. In view of it,
a scientific study of character considers antecedent generations.
Biography rests properly on genealogy. Constantine's father,
Constantius Chlorus, was a man of great mildness,
self-possession, and philosophic virtue, just, and a
Neo-Platonist of the best type, a monotheist and philanthropist
(cf. Sinclair, in Smith & W. 1. 661-2). Constantine is said
to have inherited his father's strength, courage, personal
appearance (Eumen. Paneg. c. 4), piety (Pseud.-Leo, p. 83; cf.
Const. and Euseb. in V. C. 2. 49), and general virtues. The slur
of Zosimus on the character of Constantine's mother seems to have
been quite gratuitous. Her relation to Constantius was in nowise
incompatible with virtue, and the honor afterwards paid her,
along with the indisputable good early training of Constantine
which was with her, indicate a woman of unusual character. The
later enterprise and activity with the honors and
responsibilities given her show her to have been of very
considerable energy and ability.
S:3.
Physical Characteristics
A graphic picture of his personal
appearance is drawn by Cedrenus (p. 472-3). "Constantinus Magnus
was of medium height, broad-shouldered, thick-necked, whence his
epithet Bull-necked. His complexion was ruddy, his hair neither
thick nor crisp curling, his beard scanty and not growing in many
places, his nose slightly hooked, and his eyes like the eyes of a
lion. He was joyous of heart and most cheery of countenance."
Many points in this description are confirmed by others, some
apparently contradicted. Taken in detail, his Height was probably
above medium. Over against this statement of Cedrenus (p. 472)
that he was of middle height is that of the earlier Malalas (13.
1), who, while confirming the ruddiness of complexion,
characterizes him as tall, and the explicit testimony of
Eusebius, that among those with Diocletian "there was no one
comparable with him for height" (V. C. 1. 19), and likewise among
those present at Nicaea (V. C. 3- 10). But a "thick-necked" form
hardly belongs to the strictly "tall" man, and a thick neck and
broad shoulders would hardly belong to a form of "distinguished
comeliness," if it were short (Lact. c. 18). It may be supposed
therefore that he can be described as above medium height.
Moreover, there would naturally have been more mention of height
by Lactantius and Panegyrists if it had been very extraordinary.
In respect of Countenance he was undoubtedly handsome. The
"majestic beauty of his face" mentioned by Theophanes (p. 29; cf.
V. C. 1. 19; 3. 10) is confirmed by suggestions in the
Panegyrists (e.g. Eumen. c. 17; Naz. c. 24), and all general
testimony, and not belied by the coins. His Complexion was ruddy;
"reddish" in the expression of Cedrenus (p. 272), "fiery" in that
of Malalas (13.1). His Hair, rather thin and straight, scanty
Beard, and "slightly hooked" Nose are shown also by the coins,
where the nose varies from a pronounced Roman or ungraceful
eagle's beak to a very proportionate, slightly aquiline member.
His Eyes were lion-like (Cedren.), piercingly bright (Paneg. 313,
c. 19; also Eumen.). His Expression was bright and joyous
(Cedren.), characterized by "noble gravity mingled with hilarity"
(Naz. Paneg. c. 24), by "serenity" and "cheerfulness" (cf. Euseb.
V. C. 3. 11). In brief, he seems to have been a type of the
sanguine temperament.
Added to his beauty of face was an
unquestioned beauty of form. His distinguished comeliness of
Figure (Lact. c. 18) is a favorite theme with his enthusiastic
friend Eusebius, who says, "No one was comparable with him for
grace and beauty of person" (cf. Eumen. c. 17; V. C. 1. 19; 3.
10), and that his figure was "manly and vigorous" (1. 20). The
broad Shoulders and thick Neck prepare one for the testimony to
his great bodily Strength. The feats of personal valor in combat
with the Sarmatian champions and the wild beasts (cf. above), his
personal energy in battle (e.g. before Verona; cf. above), much
special testimony (e.g. Eumen. Paneg. c. 4) and all the general
testimony, show that the superlative language of Eusebius is well
grounded, and interpreted with conservative imagination is to be
taken as fact. According to him, "he so far surpassed his
compeers in personal strength as to be a terror to them" (V. C.
1. 19), and in respect of Vigor of body was such that at the
Council of Nicaea his very bearing showed that he surpassed all
present in "invincible strength and vigor"; while at the age of
sixty or upwards, "he still possessed a sound and vigorous body,
free from all blemish and of more than youthful vivacity; a noble
mien and strength equal to any exertion, so that he was able to
join in martial exercises, to ride, endure the fatigues of
travel, engage in battle," &c. (Vict. 4. 53). In Bearing he
was "manly" (V. C. 1. 20), self-possessed, calm (V. C. 3. 11),
dignified ("noble gravity," Naz. c. 24; of. Eumen. &c.), with
"majestic dignity of mien" (V. C. 3. 10) and serenity (V. C. 3.
10). In Manners he was "suave" (epieikes) (V. C. 3. 10) and
"affable to all" (V. C. 3. 13). This singular affability was
such, according to Lactantius (c. 18), as to endear him greatly
to his soldiers. Over against this, however, must be set the
statement of Victor, Epit. that he was "a scoffer [irrisor]
rather than suave [blandus]" (Vict. Epit. 51). But this seems
founded on a false exegesis (cf. above) and withal there is no
absolute contradiction. Moreover, all his intercourse with
bishops, deputies, soldiers, citizens, barbarians, seems to have
generally made a favorable impression, and such success without
affability of manner would have been marvelous. In Dress his
taste, late in life at least, became somewhat gorgeous. If he
were reigning to-day, the comic papers would undoubtedly
represent him, like some other good and great men, with
exaggerated red neckties and figured waistcoats. He "always wore
a diadem," according to Victor, Epit. (p. 51), and according to
many (Malal. 13. 7-8; Cedren.; Pseudo-Leo, &c.) "none of the
emperors before him" wore the diadem at all. Eusebius'
description of his appearance at the Council of Nicaea would do
credit to a Washington reporter on wedding-toilets; he was
"clothed in raiment which glittered, as it were, with rays of
light, reflecting the glowing radiance of a purple robe, and
adorned with the brilliant splendor of gold and precious stones"
(V. C. 3. 10).
S:4.
Mental Characteristics
According to his biographer-friend,
Constantine was even more conspicuous for the excellence of his
psychical qualities than his physical (V. C. 1. 19). Among these
qualities are natural intelligence (V. C. 1. 19), sound judgment
(V. C. 1. 19), well-disciplined power of thought (Theoph. p. 29),
and peculiarly, as might be expected from his eye and general
energy, penetration (Theoph. p. 29). In respect of Education, it
is said on the one hand that he "reaped the advantages of a
liberal education" (V. C. 1. 19), and particularly that he was
thoroughly trained in the art of reasoning (V. C.); but according
to Anonymous Vales. (p. 471), and also Cedrenus (p. 473), his
literary education was scanty. If there was early lack, he made
up for it afterwards with characteristic energy, for he attained
very considerable erudition (of a sort) for an emperor, as is
shown in his Oration. According to Eutropius he was devoted to
liberal studies. According to Lydus he was skilled both in the
science of letters and the science of arms; for "if he had not
excelled in both sciences, he would not have been made emperor of
the Romans" (Lydus, de Magist. 3. 33),-a somewhat subjective
ground. Such was his devotion to study that, according to
Eusebius (V. C. 4. 29), "he sometimes passed sleepless nights in
furnishing his mind with divine knowledge." The measure of his
thoroughness may be gathered from the fact that his knowledge of
Greek even, does not seem to have been very extensive-"with which
he was not altogether unacquainted" (V. C. 3. 13). His learning,
as shown in his orations, is the learning of a man of affairs,
and has many elements of crudity and consequent pretentiousness;
but he is no worse than many authors-much better than most royal
authors.
His learning had at least the excellent
quality that it was radiated with reference to expression, as all
sound learning must be. According to Eusebius, much of his time
was spent in composing discourses, many of which he delivered in
public (V. C. 4. 29), and he continued to the last to compose
discourses and to deliver frequent orations in public.
The description by Eusebius of the
character of his orations (V. C. 4. 24) seems to forbid any
assumption of pure vanity as his motive. It is the most natural
thing in the world that an emperor should make speeches, and that
he should speak on scholastic or religious themes, and with the
use of classical philosophy, mythology, and literature, should be
no surprise in the days of President Harrison, Mr. Gladstone, and
the Emperor William. There is no doubt he wrote and spoke
vigorously and effectively to his soldiers, and on political and
judicial matters (witness his laws), and his learned literary
production is very fair amateur work, considering. In the
Delivery of his speeches he seems to have had self-possession and
modesty of manner, as e.g. at the Council of Nicaea, where "he
looked serenely around on the assembly with a cheerful aspect,
and having collected his thoughts in a calm and gentle tone . . .
proceeded to speak" (V. C. 3. 11). His Literary style was
somewhat inflated and verbose, but for this, compare Special
Prolegomena. His Patronage of learning showed his interest in it.
Following his father's example and continuing his work, he
encouraged the schools in Gaul (cf. above). Hosius and Eusebius
were his friends and counselors. He made Lactantius tutor to
Crispus (Hieron. Chron.). He had copies of the Scriptures made
and distributed (V. C. 3. 1). In short, he especially "encouraged
the study of letters" (Vict. Epit. 51) in every way.
S:5.
Moral Characteristics
(a) In relations with events, things, or
persons. First of all, Constantine excelled in Energy, that
fundamental of all developed character. He was pre-eminent for
masculine strength of character (Theoph. p. 29), a man of energy
(vir ingens, Eutrop. 10. 1). This was manifested at every turn,
in his successful military activity under Diocletian, in the
decisive acts at the time of leaving him, in the prosecution of
campaigns against Maximian, Maxentius, Licinius, in the wholesale
way in which he pushed internal improvements, the building of
Constantinople, the multiplication of Christian houses of
worship, in his studies, in his law-making; in short, in
everything he touched there was the same teeming, resistless
energy of the man. His Determination was "bent on effecting
whatever he had settled in his mind" (Eutrop. 10. 5). His
Rapidity of action when he rejoined his father is described by
Lactantius as incredible (Lact. c. 24). He showed the same
alacrity in his quick return and surprise of Maximian, in his
first entry into Italy, and in his campaign against Licinius.
This energy and activity rose to positive Impetuosity, which led
him at Verona, before Rome, and at Cibalis to plunge into the
midst of battle, communicating his own resistless, indomitable,
alert will to do, to his soldiers. Closely linked with these
qualities was that personal Courage and Valor, inherited from his
father (Paneg. 307, c. 3), mentioned by Eusebius (V. C. 1. 11),
and explicitly or implicitly by almost every one. This most
indubitable of all his qualities was witnessed to even by the
scoffing Julian as "inexpressibly" great (Orat. p. 13), and
mentioned even in the work whose chief aim seems, almost, to
detract from Constantine (Caes. p. 23). United with all these
characteristics of greatness was a far-reaching Ambition. This on
the one hand is represented to be an ambition for power and
glory. He was "exceedingly ambitious of military glory" (Eutrop.
10. 7); "aspiring to the sovereignty of the whole world" (Eutrop.
10. 5). According to Zosimus, at the time of the appointment of
Severus and Maximin, already having his mind set on attaining
royalty he was roused to a greater desire by the honor conferred
on Severus and Maximin, and this eager desire of power was
already well known to many. On the other hand, this ambition is
represented to be a burning zeal for righting wrongs; his wars
against Maxentius and Licinius real crusades, and his actual
objective in all things the reform to be effected. If the fruit
proves the motive, this was so; for he consistently used or tried
to use his power for what he thought public good. This he did in
Gaul, after his victories, in his legislation, and in his
internal improvements.
In view of all this powerfulness of
personality, it may be said of all successes of this "man of
power" (Eutrop. 10. 5) what Eutropius says of his success in war,
that it was great, "but not more than proportioned to his
exertions" (Eutrop.). With all this energy of personality,
however, he was far from being headstrong. On the contrary, he
showed marked Prudence, resembling his father in this also
(Paneg. 307, c. 3). Sustaining so long the delicate position at
the court of Diocletian, all his provision for guarding the
frontiers, his long-suffering in waiting to be confirmed Caesar,
in waiting his opportunity to meet Maxentius, in waiting and
getting everything in hand before meeting Licinius, his wise
moderation in demand on the conquered, and the not pressing
forward until he had everything well arranged, show this, and a
high degree of Patience withal. This latter virtue was peculiarly
characteristic whether exercised in respect of things or plans or
people, and his great patience in listening to complaints (Naz.
c. 24) is only a part of the whole. As he was patient, so he was
distinguished for Perseverance, and "firm and unshaken" (Theoph.
p. 29) Steadfastness. So great energy united with these other
qualities barely needs testimony to suggest great Faithfulness to
his tasks in hand, as in that "strict attention to his military
duties" which Lactantius says (c. 18) characterized him as a
young man. In brief, his whole personality was a marked example
of that balance of power and the measuring of remote ends which
is included under the word Self-control, in the use of the
philosophy of which he, as well as his father, was a disciple. In
this exercise of his great energy towards himself he was
recognized to be remarkable. This self-control was manifested
especially in his unusual Chastity. As a young man he was marked
by correct moral habits (probis moribus, Lact. c. 18). The
specific testimony of Eusebius to this (V. C.) would have
comparatively little weight on a point like this, and the same
might be said, in a measure, of the testimony of the Panegyrists
(Naz. c. 24; 307, c. 4; 313, c. 4), who mention this virtue. But
panegyrical art would forbid the laudation of what was
conspicuously lacking; rather it would not be mentioned, and the
general testimony goes to show at least a contemporary reputation
for extraordinary continence, considering his time and
environment. His relationship with Minervina hardly touches this
reputation, whether she was wife or only legitimate concubine.
The accusations and innuendoes of Julian, Caesars, have, in any
fairly critical estimate, hardly more than the weight of some
malignant gossip whose backbiting is from his own heart. "Honi
soit qui mat y pense." Like Licinius, he seems to have been
unable to understand that purity of heart which permitted the
free companionship of women in social or religious life. Julian's
general charge of luxuriousness and sensuousness (p. 43, 306, 25,
38, 42, &c.) must be regarded largely in the same light; for
this delight in soft garments, precious gems, games, and
festivities was, if we can judge aright, in no sense "enervating
pleasure and voluptuous indulgence": for he was indefatigable in
studies and works of all sorts, although it is perhaps to be
referred to the vanity and love of display of which he is
accused, and of which more later.
(b) In relations with people. In general he
was Amiable,-popular with the soldiers, popular even with his
subdued enemies (Eutrop. 10. 7). Diocletian reminded Galerius
(Lact. c. 18) that he was "amiable," and he must have been so;
for he was "loved by soldiers" (Eumen. c. 16), and so "endeared
to the troops" that in the appointment of Caesar he was "the
choice of every individual" (Lact. c. 18). This popularity he
indeed "sought by every kind of liberality and obligingness"
(Eutr. 10. 7.), but what he sought he found.
A very large element in this popularity was
the universal Mildness, Mercifulness, and Forbearance which he
showed. In these is found a class of characteristics which stand
alongside his energy of character as peculiarly characteristic
and great. "He whose familiar habit it was to save men's lives"
(V. C. 4. 6), as a young man promised, in the opinion of
Diocletian (Lact. c. 18), to be "milder and more merciful than
his father." Even in the opinion of Julian he was "far more
humane (praoteron), and in very many other respects superior to
others, as I would demonstrate if there were opportunity"
(Julian, Orat. p. 15); and he again (p. 96) speaks of him in
laudatory terms as contrasted with the other emperors. Eusebius,
as might be expected, is still stronger in expression, and sets
Constantine "in contrast with tyrants who were stained with blood
of countless numbers," saying that in Constantine's reign "the
sword of justice lay idle," and men were "rather constrained by a
paternal authority than governed by the stringent power of the
laws" (V. C. 3. 1). This mercifulness he manifested on every
occasion. "When Sigusium was on fire," he directed greater effort
towards saving it than he had to capturing it (Naz. Paneg. c.
21). At the taking of Rome he punished a certain few only of
those most intimate with Maxentius (Zos.), and even Zosimus notes
the great joy and relief of people at the exchange of Constantine
for Maxentius. It is noticeable that in the inscriptions the
epithet "clementissimus," most rare of other emperors, is found a
considerable number of times of him. So great was this mildness
of conduct that he was "generally blamed for his clemency" (V. C.
4. 31), on the ground that crimes were not visited with their
proper penalties. The testimony to this humaneness of character
is almost unlimited and conclusive, but there is more or less
evidence which is urged in qualification or contradiction. It is
rather a common thing to say that he was at first mild, but later
pride of prosperity caused him greatly to depart from this former
agreeable mildness of temper (Eutrop.). Then the execution of the
various members of his own family (cf. discussion below), the
exposure of prisoners to the wild beasts (Eumen. Paneg. c. 12),
his severe decree against those who should conceal copies of the
works of Arius (Socr. 1. 9), his treatment of the Jews (Greg.
Niceph., or at least his laws), and the severe penalties of some
of his laws are among the points brought against him. But the
remark of Eutropius is to be interpreted by the "former agreeable
mildness of temper," to which he himself witnesses, and the fact
that this latter period was that where the points of view of the
two men had widely diverged. The exposure of prisoners to wild
beasts was no evidence of cruelty in itself; for under the
customs then prevailing it might have been cruelty to his
subjects not to have done this, and his treatment of the
barbarian enemies is rather to be interpreted in the light of the
testimony of Eutropius that he "left on the minds of the
barbarians [Goths] a strong remembrance of his kindness" (10. 7).
His treatment of his family is discussed elsewhere, but whatever
its bearings may be, there is no just historico-psychological
ground whatever for the use of the word which is so freely
bandied,-cruelty. Cruel he was not in any sense. Even the extreme
of the Panegyrist who says to him, "you are such by inheritance
and destiny that you cannot be cruel" (Eumen. Paneg. c. 14), is
nearer the truth. The penalties of his laws lay him open in a
degree to a charge of growing severity; but it was great, if
sometimes mistaken and overzealous, regard for what he deemed the
public welfare, and on quite a different plane from anything
which we express as cruelty. Though with the growing conservatism
of a man who finds his purposes of mercy continually perverted
and his indulgences abused, he yet remained to the end of his
life most merciful and mild compared with those who went before
and who followed.
This fact becomes more clear in seeing how
he excelled in kindred virtues. The Patience already mentioned,
distinguished forbearance, and undoubted benevolence, or at least
generosity, are traits which group with mercy and have no
fellowship with cruelty. And these he had. He showed
distinguished Forbearance, and that oftentimes, as in a
disturbance at Antioch, where he "applied with much forbearance
the remedy of persuasion" (V. C. 3. 59). The outrageous conduct
of those who, in the Arian disturbances, dared "even to insult
the statues of the emperor . . . had little power to excite his
anger, but rather caused in him sorrow of spirit" (V. C. 3. 4),
"and he endured with patience men who were exasperated against
himself." These words are by Eusebius, to be sure; but his
conduct with Donatists, Arians, Maximinianus, and Licinius, in
individual and on the whole, show that in fact he did habitually
exercise great forbearance. To this was added much activity of
positive Kindness. On first accession he "visited with much
considerate kindness all those provinces" (V. C. p. 23). This
kindness was shown throughout his reign, and brightly illustrated
in his treatment of the persecuted Christians from the
beginning,-in his acts in Gaul, in his famous toleration edict,
in his letter to Maximin, and in his acts throughout. After his
victory over Maxentius came the edict that those wrongfully
deprived of their estates should be permitted to enjoy them
again, . . . unjustly exiled were recalled and freed from
imprisonment (Euseb. V. C. 1. 41). After the victory over
Licinius he recalled Christian exiles, ordered restitution of
property, released from labor in mines, from the solitude of
islands, from toil in public works, &c., those who had been
oppressed in these ways (V. C. p. 70-71). There is strong
concensus of testimony to a very lovable habitual exercise of
this trait in his "readiness to grant hearing," "patience in
listening," and "kindness of response" to those whose complaints
he had patiently listened to (Naz. 24). He was most excellent
(commodissimus) to hear embassies and complaints of provinces
(Vict. Epit. p. 51),-a testimony which is borne out by the facts.
His Generosity is equally undoubted. His magnificent gifts and
largesses to the army were still remembered in the time of Julian
(Orat. p. 13). His constant and lavish giving to the Christians
is Eusebius' unending theme: but it was not to the churches
alone; for we read of his munificence to heathen tribes (V. C. 2.
22), his liberality to the poor (V. C. 1. 43) in giving money for
clothing, provision for orphans and widows, marriage portions for
virgins, compensation to losers in law suits (V. C. 4. 4). It was
"scarcely possible to be near him without benefit" (V. C. 1. 43;
cf. V. C. 3. 16; 3. 22; 4. 44).
Though slow to serve some friends through
suspicion (i.e. dubius thus explained), he was "exceedingly
generous towards others, neglecting no opportunity to add to
their riches and honors" (Eutrop. 10. 7). "With royal
magnificence he unlocked all his treasures and distributed his
gifts with rich and high-souled liberality" (V. C. 3. 1). He
seems to have carried it rather to excess, even on the showing of
Eusebius. "No one could request a favor of the emperor, and fail
of obtaining what he sought. . . . He devised new dignities, that
he might invest a larger number with the tokens of his favor" (V.
C. 4. 2). It is worth giving the account by Eusebius of this
conduct in full here. He says (V. C. 4. 54) that this "was a
virtue, however, which subjected him to censure from many, in
consequence of the baseness of wicked men, who ascribed their own
crimes to the emperor's forbearance. In truth, I can myself bear
testimony to the grievous evils which prevailed during those
times: I mean the violence of rapacious and unprincipled men, who
preyed on all classes of society alike, and the scandalous
hypocrisy of those who crept into the church. . . . His own
benevolence and goodness of heart, the genuineness of his own
faith, and his truthfulness of character induced the emperor to
credit the professions of those reputed Christians who craftily
preserved the semblance of sincere affection for his person. The
confidence he reposed in such men sometimes forced him into
conduct unworthy of himself, of which envy took advantage to
cloud in this respect the luster of his character." There seems,
therefore, some ground for the charge of Prodigality, that he
"wasted public money in many useless buildings, some of which he
shortly after destroyed because they were not built to stand"
(Zos.), and (Zos. p. 104) "gave great largesses to ill-deserving
persons, mistaking profusion for munificence" (ten gar asotian
hegeito philotimian). Zosimus adds that to do this, he "imposed
severe taxes on all, so severe that fathers were obliged to
prostitute their daughters to raise the money, that tortures were
employed, and in consequence whole villages depopulated." This
testimony is, however, by one bitterly prejudiced, who regarded
money spent on Christian houses of worship as worse than wasted,
and indicates only what appears from Eusebius as well, that
expenditures for cities, schools, and churches built, and for
other matters, must have been enormous. But so, too, they were
enormous under other emperors, and Constantine, at least, instead
of spending on debauchery, seems to have had something to show
for it. As to taxes, Zosimus would undoubtedly sympathize with
the Kentucky moonshiners in their "oppression" by revenue
officers, if he were here now and Constantine were President, and
would fulminate in the daily papers against the wicked party
which by its wicked tariff compels men to marry their daughters
to rich husbands in order to get their taxes paid,-and incidental
luxuries supplied. But that does not say that an exorbitant
tariff, to supply "jobs" which shall furnish rich "spoils" for
those who have "pulls" out of the pockets of the many, is good;
yet this, in modern phrase, is about what Constantine did.
Constantine's trust in his friends and generosity to the
unworthy, with its consequences on the tax-payers, reminds
strikingly of some of our own soldier-presidents, whom we love
and admire without approving all their acts. And yet, on the
other hand, much of the expenditure was for solid improvement,
and could only be criticised by those who now oppose expenditures
for navy, for improved postal service, public buildings,
subsidies, &c.; though yet, again, his wholesale way of doing
things also reminds one of the large generosity of some modern
politicians in their race for popularity, with their Pension,
Education, River and Harbor, and what not liberalities out of the
pockets of the people. But whatever unwisdom may have been
mingled, all this profusion shows in him a generosity of
character which was at least amiable, and in the main genuine.
His generosity took also the form of Hospitality, as shown by his
entertainings at the Council of Nicaea (V. C. 4. 49). With all
these qualities of amiable popularity there seems to have been
joined a yet more fundamental element, of permanent influence
among men, in a spirit of Justice so marked that the claim of the
Panegyrist is hardly too sweeping when he says that "all who took
refuge with him for whatever cause he treated justly and
liberally" (Paneg. 307. 5)-if there is added "up to his light and
ability." Closely linked with this again is that "Unbending
righteousness" of which Theophanes (p. 29) speaks. And to all
these qualities was added that synthesis of qualities,-a
remarkable Tact in his intercourse with men, a trait typically
exemplified in his conduct at the Council of Nicaea, where "the
emperor gave patient audience to all alike, and reviewed every
proposition with steadfast attention, and by occasionally
assisting the arguments of each party in turn, he gradually
disposed even the most vehement disputants to a reconciliation, .
. . persuading some, convincing others by his reasonings,
praising those who spoke well, and urging all to unity of
sentiment, until at last he succeeded in bringing them to one
mind and judgment respecting every disputed question" (V. C. 3.
13).
But success with men and popularity seem to
have opened that pitfall of success,-Vanity,-and it is charged
that he fell thereinto, although there is testimony to the exact
contrary. According to Victor (Epit. p. 51) he was "immeasurably
greedy of praise." This agrees with, and is at the same time
modified by Eutropius' testimony to his ambition for glory and
for honorable popularity (10. 7), and his apparently complacent
reception of the outrageous flattery of Optatian (cf. his
letter), seems at least to show some weakness in this direction.
So again his tendency toward Magnificence, as shown in his
assuming the diadem and his dress in general (cf. above), in the
splendor of banquets as witnessed by his approving friend (V. C.
3. 15), his desire to do on a large scale whatever he did,
whether in the building of cities or splendid houses of worship,
or in book-binding ornamentations of pearls and gems. And yet
again it is shown in what seems at this distance his Conceit,
sublime in its unconsciousness in reckoning himself a sort of
thirteenth, but, it would seem, a facile princeps apostle, in the
disposition for his burial, "anticipating with extraordinary
fervor of faith that his body would share their title with the
apostles themselves. . . . He accordingly caused twelve coffins
to be set up in this church, like sacred pillars, in honor and
memory of the apostolic number, in the centre of which his own
was placed, having six of theirs on either side of it" (V. C. 4.
60). One can seem to read in this a whole history of unblushing
flattery, and it reminds that Eunapius (Vic. aedes. p. 41) has
spoken of his pleasure in the stimulant of "intoxicating
flattery." Still it is not to be supposed that this was a
peculiarly weak vanity or an absorbing one. The testimony to his
Modesty (V. C. 3. 10), though by Eusebius, is too circumstantial
to be wholly unreal, and the testimony to his Humility in his
"indignation at excessive praise" (V. C. 4. 48), and the records
of Eusebius that he "was not rendered arrogant by these plaudits
nor uplifted by the praises" (Euseb. V. C. 1. 39), and of the
Chronicon Paschale (p. 521) that "he was not at all puffed up by
the acclamations," evidently represent a genuine thing. This
mixed character is too frequently met with to be
incomprehensible. Real power, recognizing its own success, glad
of the recognition of others, not at bottom because of cold
vanity, but from warm appreciation of human friendliness, became
through success in carrying out what seemed to him, and were,
divine plans, fired with the thought that he was the especial and
necessary minister of God, that his thoughts and will were
directly touched by the Divine Will and thus that whatever he
thought or willed was infallible. He is not unlike some modern
rulers. The spirit, though one of real vanity, or egotism at
least, has an element of nobleness in it, and in most of its
manifestations commands respect along with the smile. The
accusation of Zosimus of Arrogance "when he had attained to the
sole authority," and that he "gave himself up to the unrestrained
exercise of his power," must be interpreted like those of other
un-Christian witnesses, in the light of the fact that his actions
worked relative hardships to the non-Christians, and that very
justice to the Christians would seem injustice to them, and if
Constantine was more than just, his generosity was at some one's
expense. His energy of execution and constant success, with his
dominating idea of a Divine mission, would naturally engender
this faith in his own infallibility; for what is arrogance but
this vanity joined with power? His action toward
schismatics-Donatists, Arians, or orthodox troublers of his
peace-was such as to suggest some degree of this vice. Yet his
success in keeping the followers of the old religion fairly
mollified, and his generally successful tact, showed that this
was in no sense a dominating and unrelieved characteristic. Two
other weaknesses closely allied with these are also imputed to
Constantine: Jealousy, as illustrated by the statement that
"wishing to minimize the deeds of his predecessors, he took pains
to tarnish their virtues by giving them jocose epithets" (Dion.
Cont. 2 [Mueller, p. 199]; cf. Vict. Epit. p. 51), and
Suspiciousness (Eutrop. 10. 7); for which latter, a man who had
survived as many plots as he had, might well be excused. Again
and again and again he trusted men, and they deceived him. His
conduct with Maximian shows that at least in the beginning,
before he had had so much experience of untrustworthiness, he was
remarkably free from this. A much more serious charge is that of
Faithlessness preferred by Zosimus, who says (2. 28), "in
violation of his oaths (for this was customary with him)" and
twice repeats the charge. Eusebius, on the other hand, tells what
great pains Constantine took not to be the one to break peace
with Licinius (V. C.). One is worth as little as the other. The
charge seems to rest mainly or wholly on his conduct towards
Licinius, in beginning war and in putting him to death. A small
boy once held a smaller boy in a firm grip, but agreed to spare
him the cuffing he deserved because he was smaller. The smaller
small boy promptly set his teeth in the leg of the larger small
boy, and was properly cuffed for it. Thereupon the smaller small
boy's big brother was filled with indignation, which he
manifested by seeking and finding the same fate. The indignation
in behalf of Licinius seems to be in large measure big brother
indignation-indignation with the wrong party. He appears to have
been one of those who held a compact to be binding on the other
party only. It wasn't in the bargain that he should persecute the
Christians, or in the other bargain that he should plot his
benefactor's overthrow. That king in Scripture who took back his
promise to forgive a debt of ten thousand talents was not
faithless.
(c) In relations with his family. He was a
filial Son, having the confidence of his father, as shown in his
wish of succession, and showing his mother all honors when he
came to power (cf. coins showing her position as empress, and
V.C.). "And well may his character be styled blessed for his
filial piety as well as on other grounds" (V. C. 3.
47).
It is in this relation to his family,
however, that the most serious attacks on the character of
Constantine have been made. Eutropius says: "But the pride of
prosperity caused Constantine greatly to depart from his former
agreeable mildness of temper. Falling first upon his own
relatives, he put to death his son, an excellent man; his
sister's son, a youth of amiable disposition; soon afterwards his
wife; and subsequently many of his friends." This has been a
battle-ground of accusation or excusation in all the centuries.
The testimony is very meagre and uncertain, but this much may be
said: 1. That any jury would regard the fact of deaths as
evidenced. It is witnessed by Eutrop. (10. 6), Zos., Vict.,
Hieron., &c. 2. That he was unjustifiable is not proven. In
respect to the death of Fausta, at least, there was probably just
cause; whether love intrigue or other intrigue, there seems to
have been some real occasion. The death of Crispus, too, was from
no mere suspicions, but on apparently definite grounds of
distrust. It is historical assumption to say that he had no good
grounds, whatever these may have been-illicit relationship with
Fausta or more probably political intrigue. At the worst, he was
put to death on false but, at the time, apparently true
accusation: what has been done by judges and juries of the best
intention. Of Licinius, his sister's son, it can hardly be said
that he had the same reason, as he was still a boy. But
remembering the inherited character of Licinius, and noticing the
curious fact that the cordiality between Constantia and
Constantine was peculiarly great to the end, it seems as if there
must have been some mitigating circumstance. In all historical
candor it looks as if there had been some general intrigue
against Constantine which had been met in this way; but the
fairest verdict to enter is "causes unknown."
In estimating the characteristic value of
the acts it must be noted, 1. That it has in no sense the
character of private execution. The emperor was judge. Even if he
mistook evidence and put to death an innocent man, it was as when
a judge does the same. 2. That the relative moral character of
punishments inflicted is conditioned by the custom of punishment.
An English judge of the past was not as cruel in hanging a man
for theft, as a modern one in applying the extreme penalty of the
law to an offense with mitigating circumstances, would be. 3.
That all law of evidence, all rhyme and reason, says that any
man's any act is to be interpreted in the light of his general
character. Where evidence is lacking or doubtful, such evidence
of general character has actual weight, and may be conclusive. In
application to these acts note (a) The peculiar forbearance which
Constantine exercised toward Maximian. (b) The conclusive
universal testimony to the general mildness of his character and
his habitual mercifulness. In view of this, it is to be judged
that there was some real, or appearing, great ground of judicial
wrath. 4. That Constantine had suffered from plots on the part of
his own relatives over and over again, and spared, and been
plotted against again, as in the cases of Maximian, Bassianus,
and Licinius. 5. That they were not put to death "in a gust of
passion" at once, but in successive acts. In view of these things
it is fair and just to say that they were put to death on grounds
which seemed just and for the welfare of society, and their
deaths in no sense indicate cruelty or unnaturalness on the part
of Constantine. Even the death of Licinius must be interpreted by
the political ethics of the times and its circumstances. So long
as sentimentalists continue to send bouquets to murderers and
erect monuments to anarchists, they will regard execution, even
legal execution, as prima facie evidence of cruelty, and the
killing of a murderer in self-defense, or the hanging of a
traitor, as crime. Constantine's whole character ensures that if
he thought he could have spared them, or any one, with safety, he
would have done so.
In general he was a faithful husband as
respects marital virtue, and a good father. He took care that his
children should be well educated. Crispus was under Lactantius
(Hieron.), and the others perhaps under Arborius ("Auson. de
Prof. Burdig. 16"); at all events, he had the most accomplished
teachers of secular learning to instruct in the art of war, and
in political and legal science (V. C. 4. 51), and both by his own
instruction and that of men of approved piety, took special pains
with their religious training. He early appointed them to offices
of authority, and distributed the empire among them.
(d) In relations with friends. His general
conduct toward his friends was marked by very great liberality
(cf. above). Eutropius speaks emphatically of this even while he
uses the expression which has been such a puzzle to all, that
"toward some of his friends he was double" (or dangerous), a
phrase which is interpreted by Johannes Ant. as meaning "to some
of friends false (unsound, hupoulos) and unsafe (unwholesome,
ouch hugios)" (ed. Mueller 4. p. 602-3). His uniform effort to
please his friends has been discussed above.
(e) In relations with society. 1. As
General he seems to have been popular with his own soldiers (cf.
above), inspiring them with enthusiasm and energy. Toward hostile
soldiers he was merciful (cf. above), not following up an
advantage further than was necessary, and toward conquered
enemies unusually forbearing; e.g. at Sigusium, at Rome, with
Maximian, with Licinius, and with the Goths (cf. above). His
generalship is characterized by careful provision for the
guarding of his rear, and by rapidity of movement and dash in
actual conflict. 2. As Legislator he "enacted many laws, some
good, but most of them superfluous, and some severe" (Eutrop. 10.
8). He seems to have had a weakness for law-making which, at all
events, shows a characteristic respect for law little shared by
his early contemporaries. Of course Eutropius would consider all
laws in favor of Christians superfluous. Laws for the abolition
of idolatrous practices, for the erection of Christian houses of
worship, observance of the Lord's Day (V. C. 4. 23), permitting
cases to be tried before bishops (Soz. 1. 9; Euseb. H. E. 10. 7;
Cod. Theod. Tit. de episc. 2) &c., would surely seem so. But
even in other laws Constantine seems to have had at times an
abnormal zeal for law-making, when his energies were not occupied
in war or church-building. The laws were generally wise and, at
the least, benevolently or righteously meant. Such were the
abolition of crucifixion (Vict. Caes.) and of gladiatorial shows
(V. C. 4. 25; Socr. 1. 8; C. Theod. 15. 12. 1), the law that the
families of slaves were not to be separated (C. Theod. 2.25),
that forbidding the scourging of debtors (C. Theod. 7. 3), and
that repressing calumny (Vict. Epit. 51). Among the "severe" laws
were such as punished certain forms of illicit intercourse with
death. 3. As Statesman his policy was broad and far-reaching. He
fully organized and carefully established one section of his
territory before he enlarged. He changed the whole constitution
of the empire, both civil and military (cf. Wordsworth, in Smith
& W.). He inaugurated reforms in finance, and especially was
most assiduous in the matter of internal improvements, restoring
and building from one end of the empire to the other. The great
characteristic consummation of his reign was the union of Church
and State, over which men are still divided as to whether it was
a tremendous blessing or a tremendous curse. Tremendous it surely
was in its shaping power on world history. (Compare numerous
titles under Literature.) The general statement of Eutropius that
"in the beginning of his reign he might have been compared to the
best princes, in the latter part only to those of a middling
character," must be interpreted by the fact that during the
latter part of his reign he was so associated with Christianity,
in itself a falling away in the eyes of the old religionists. His
reign was one of order and justice such as few were, and an order
out of chaos, a reign in which it could be peculiarly said that
"chastity was safe and marriage protected" (Naz. c. 38), where a
man's life and property were secure as under few of the Roman
emperors. It is idle to refuse the title of Great to a man who,
from the beginning, followed a consistent, though developing
policy, organized the interior, and securely guarded the frontier
of his empire at each enlargement, and finally unified the whole
on such a basis as to secure large internal prosperity and
development.
S:6.
Religious Characteristics
Was Constantine a Christian? This vain
question has to be considered, hardly discussed. The interminable
opinions, one way or the other, are for the most part
wise-seeming, meaningless generalizations. Like any generalized
statement, it is conditioned by the point of view of the author.
When ten men answered the question "What is a Christian?" in ten
different ways, who shall say what any one is? This has been the
difficulty. One does not conceive of Christianity apart from
baptismal regeneration. The question has then narrowed to one of
baptism. Constantine was not a Christian until just before his
death. Another has some other test. Another is not a Christian
himself, and so on. A good Biblical, Protestant starting-point is
to say he was a Christian as soon as he believed in Christ, and
that the evidence of faith is in confession and action. Already,
before his campaign into Italy, he seems to have been in intimate
contact with the Christians. Hosius was probably already one of
his advisers. The young emperor had inherited his father's piety
(Paneg. 307, c. 5), and was inclined to monotheism. The words of
advisers must have made him think at least, and he seems to have
made a sort of test of believing at the time of the famous
"vision of the cross," whatever that may have been. Judging from
the way men think and feel their way to faith, it seems
psychologically probable that, feeling his way along to that
point, he tried faith and, having success, he substantially
believed from that time on. Certainly from a very early period
after this, the evidences begin to be clear and increasingly so
as presumably his faith itself became more clear and fixed. The
account in Eusebius of the process of thought by which he
inclined toward Christianity has the greatest plausibility. He
says that "considering the matter of Divine assistance, it
occurred to him that those who had relied on idols had been
deceived and destroyed, while his father . . . had honored the
one Supreme God, had found him Saviour, &c. . . . he judged
it folly to join in the idle worship of those who were no gods .
. . and felt it incumbent on him to honor no other than the God
of his father." The nature of the vision of the cross, whether a
miracle, a natural phenomenon, or only a dream, does not affect
the probability of the account by Eusebius of what followed it
(V. C. 1. 32). "At the time above specified, being struck with
amazement at the extraordinary vision, and resolving to worship
no other God save him who had appeared to him, he sent for those
who were acquainted with the mysteries of his doctrines, and
inquired also what God was. . . . They affirmed that he was God,
the only begotten Son of the one and only God," and he thereupon
"made the priests of God his counsellors and deemed it incumbent
on him to honor the God who had appeared to him, with all
devotion." According to Sozomen, "it is universally admitted
Constantine embraced the religion of the Christians previous to
his war with Maxentius and prior to his return to Rome and Italy;
and this is evidenced by the dates of the laws which he enacted
in favor of religion" (Soz. 1. 5; cf. 1. 3). Philostorgius (1.
6), "in conformity with all other writers," ascribes to the
victory over Maxentius (Photius. Epit.). This is confirmed, too,
by the remark of the Panegyrist (313, c. 4; cf. c. 2 and c. 11),
that he conducted the war by Divine instruction, and the famous
inscription on the triumphal arch, "instinctu Divinitatis."
According to Augustine he was at the time of the petition of the
Donatists, "mindful of the hope which he maintained in Christ"
(August. contra litt. Petil. Bk. II. c. 92, p. 205).
The tales of his baptism at this time, or
by Sylvester at all, are pure fables (cf. under The Mythical
Constantine), but it appears from antecedent probability, from
testimony, and from his early subsequent identification with the
Christians that he became fairly convinced at this time. His
letters concerning the council at Arles, to be sure, have little
direct evidence, but enough to show that he regarded the
Christian religion as the worship of that one supreme God, and in
them Hosius was already his trusted adviser. But in his letters
to Chrestus (314) he speaks of those who are "forgetful of their
own salvation and the reverence due to the most holy faith," and
if his letter to the bishops after the council at Arles-a letter
full of expressions like "Christ the Saviour," "brethren
beloved," "I who myself await the judgment of Christ," "our
Saviour"-be genuine, Constantine was well advanced in his
commitment in 314; but whether it is or not, the fact of his
Christian advisers, of his laws in behalf of Christians, and
various substantial favors to them, his recognition of their God
as his one God, makes it almost idle to discuss the question. Was
Constantine a Christian in 314? What is a Christian? He seems to
have been. The type was that of many a business-man church-member
of to-day-Christians, but neither over-well-instructed, nor
dangerously zealous in the exercise of his faith. It must be
remembered that during these earlier years his confession of his
faith and identification of himself with the Christians was
conditioned by his relation to the old religion. Such a change
was a radical novelty. His position was not yet secure. He had to
use his utmost tact to keep all elements in hand. He was
conditioned just as a modern Christian emperor or president, a
majority of whose political advisers and subjects or electors are
non-religious. He had great problems of political organization to
effect, and was immersed in these. The only matter of surprise is
that he grew so rapidly. There is no ground whatever for
supposing that he dissembled to the end, or even at all. To say
that his retaining the title of pontifex maximus, or making
concessions respecting the old worship, or allowing soothsayers
to be consulted, or even the postponement of his baptism,
indicate this, is critical absurdity in the face of evidence.
Testimony, both heathen and Christian, to the openness of his
action is complete, and the testimony of his acts-such, e.g., as
the law for the observance of Sunday-conclusive. Later, at least,
he "most openly destroyed temple worship and built Christian
houses of worship" (Eunap. Vita AEdes. 37, ed. Boiss. p. 20).
From the defeat of Licinius on, edicts, letters, speeches, acts
of all sorts, testify to a most unequivocal adoption of the
Christian religion. Eusebius hardly overstates in saying that "he
maintained a continual testimony to his Christianity, with all
boldness and before all men, and so far was he from shrinking
from an open profession of the Christian name, that he rather
desired to make it manifest to all that he regarded this as his
highest honor" (V. C. 3. 2). Really the question whether he
considered himself, or was considered, a Christian at and after
the time of the Council of Nicaea is too idle even to mention, if
it had not been gravely discussed. In the opinion of the bishops
there he was "most pious" and "dear to God" (Ep. synod. in Socr.
1. 9; Theodoret, 1. 8). On his part, letters are full of pious
expression and usually begin or end or both with "beloved
brethren." To the council itself he describes himself as
"fellow-servant" of "Him who is our common Lord and Saviour."
Another more considerable position is that all that indisputable
external connection with Christianity was pure political
expediency, that he was a shrewd politician who saw which way the
wind was blowing, and had skill to take advantage of it. That
Constantine was not a Christian in the strict sense even to the
end of his life was the position of Keim. Burckhardt regards him
as a pure politician, without a touch of Christian life. Brieger
(1880) says we have not grounds to decide either way, whether he
was "a godless egoistic fatalist or had a more or less warm
religious or even Christian interest," but that the fixed fact
is, that it was not because of his inner belief in the Christian
religion that he showed favor to the Christians. In a brief
attempt to get some basis in the sources, the enthusiastic
testimony of Eusebius and other writers, explicit as it is, may
be quite disregarded, even the testimony to facts, such as his
practice of giving thanks (V. C. 1. 39), of invoking Divine aid
(Euseb. V. C. 2, 4, 6, 13; Soz. 2. 34), of his erecting a place
of prayer in his palace (Soz. 1. 8), of his fasting (V. C. 2.
41), of his having a stated hour of prayer (V. C. 4. 22),
although all these are interesting. The documents, however,
unless by supremely uncritical rejection, can be regarded as
fundamental sources. A brief analysis of these, even though
imperfect, will furnish grounds on the basis of which those who
apply various tests may apply them. Starting from his faith in
Christ, surely the center of Christianity, he believed Christ to
be Son of God, "God and the Son of God the author of every
blessing" (S. C.), the revealer of the Father, who has "revealed
a pure light in the person of Thy Son . . . and hast thus given
testimony concerning Thyself" (S. C. 1), proceeding from the
Father (S. C.), and incarnate, his incarnation having been
predicted also by the prophets. He believed this Son of God to be
his Saviour (Ad Tyr., Ad Ant., Ad Euseb., &c.) "our common
Lord and Saviour" (Ad Euseb.), "our Saviour, our hope, and our
life" (Ad eccl. Al.). He believed in his miraculous birth (S. C.)
and in his death for our deliverance (Ad Nic.; cf. Ad Mac.
&c.), "the path which leads to everlasting life" (S. C. 1),
"a precious and toilsome" work (Ad Euseb.), and in his ascension
into heaven (S. C. 1). He believed in "God the Father" (Ad Euseb.
2), "Almighty" (Ad Euseb.), Lord of all (Ad Euseb. 2), and the
Holy Ghost (Ad eccl. Al.; cf. S. C.). He believed in "Divine
Providence" (Ad Eccl. Al.; Ad Alex. et Ar.; Ad. Euseb. 1), God
the preserver of all men (Ad Alex. et Ar.), who sees all things
(Ad Syn. Nic.), who is near us and the observer of all our
actions (S. C.), and "under the guidance of whose Almighty hand"
he is (Ad Prov. Pal.), that all things are regulated by the
determination of his will (Ad Euseb.). He believed in the
existence of a personal devil (Ad Eccl. Al.). He believed in the
future life (Ad Prov. Pal.), "the only true life" (S. C. 12), the
"strife for immortality" (Ad Euseb.), to which those may aspire
who know Him (S. C. 12). He believed in future rewards and
punishments (Ad Prov. Pal.; S. C. 23). He believed in the
inspiration of the Scriptures (Ad Eccl. Al.). He loved God (Ad
Euseb. 2; V. C. 2. 55), and considered it his chief work in life
to glorify Christ (S. C.). He loved his fellow-men, being
disposed "to love you with an enduring affection" (Ad Ant.; V. C.
3. 60, &c.), and recognized it as virtue in others (8, c.
11). To him, God, in general, is the source of all blessings (Ad
Prov. Pal.; S. C., &c.). "I am most certainly persuaded," he
says, "that I myself owe my life, my every breath, in short, my
very inmost and secret thoughts to the favor of the Supreme God"
(Ad Prov. Pal.). He recognizes contrition as a requisite for
pardon (Ad. Prov. Pal), and that it is the power of God which
removes guilt (Ad Euseb.). In the conduct of life. "Our Saviour's
words and precepts are a model, as it were, of what our life
should be" (Ad. Ant.; V. C. 3. 60).
Expositions of his doctrinal and ethical
positions might be multiplied almost without end from the many
and fruitful sources, but a few specimens in his own expression
will best show the spirit of his religious life. A most
suggestive and beautiful sketch of Christ's ministry on earth too
long to quote here may be found in his Oration (ch. 15), but the
following selections will give the idea:
A description of the inner Christian life.
"For the only power in man which can be elevated to a comparison
with that of God is sincere and guiltless service and devotion of
heart to Himself, with the contemplation and study of whatever
pleases Him, the raising our affections above the things of
earth, and directing our thoughts, as far as we may, to high and
heavenly objects" (S. C. 14).
A description of the outer Christian life.
"Compare our religion with your own. Is there not with us genuine
concord, and unwearied love of others? If we reprove a fault, is
not our object to admonish, not to destroy; our correction for
safety, not for cruelty? Do we not exercise not only sincere
faith toward God, but fidelity in the relations of social life?
Do we not pity the unfortunate? Is not ours a life of simplicity
which disdains to cover evil beneath the mask of fraud and
hypocrisy?" (S. C. 23).
A prayer. "Not without cause, O holy God,
do I prefer this prayer to Thee, the Lord of all. Under Thy
guidance have I devised and accomplished measures fraught with
blessing: preceded by Thy sacred sign, I have led Thy armies to
victory: and still on each occasion of public danger, I follow
the same symbol of Thy perfections while advancing to meet the
foe. Therefore have I dedicated to Thy service a soul duly
attempered by love and fear. For Thy name I truly love, while I
regard with reverence that power of which Thou hast given
abundant proofs, to the confirmation and increase of my faith"
(Ad prov. Or.).
A confession of faith in God and in Christ.
"This God I confess that I hold in unceasing honor and
remembrance; this God I delight to contemplate with pure and
guileless thoughts in the height of his glory." "His pleasure is
in works of moderation and gentleness. He loves the meek and
hates the turbulent spirit, delighting in faith. He chastises
unbelief" (Ad Sap.). "He is the supreme judge of all things, the
prince of immortality, the giver of everlasting life" (S. C.
36).
Was Constantine a Christian? Let each one
apply his own test.
S:7.
General Characterization
Before trying to gather into continuous
statement the traits of character which have been examined, a few
general characterizations must be mentioned at least. Beginning
at the bottom, the unfriendly, or hostile, or at the least
unsympathetic, heathen testimonies generalize him as at least
relatively and on the whole both great and good. The general
tendency of heathen testimony is to represent him as admirable in
the early part of his reign, but execrable, or less admirable, in
the latter part; that of Christian writers is to represent a
growth of excellence, which raises him to saintship at the end.
This is most natural. Favoring Christianity was itself a moral
fall to a heathen, and bestowing money on Christians would be
robbery. The turning of his character was with his changing face
towards Christianity, and culminated in the overthrow of
Licinius. Licinius fought really as the champion of heathenism.
The adherents of a lost cause are characterizing their victor. It
is like an ex-Confederate characterizing Lincoln or Grant. The
point of view is different. Honest and true men in the South
thought Lincoln a curse, and often in popular verdict his
character was "black." The popular proverb quoted by Victor
(Epit. p. 51), "Bull-necked for ten years, for twelve a
freebooter, and for ten a spendthrift (immature child)," has just
the value of a Southern popular opinion of Lincoln, or a rural
Northerner's of "Jeff Davis." Indeed, the first might summarize
at times the Southern popular verdict of Grant; the second, a
frequently expressed estimate of Lincoln's conduct in the
emancipation of slaves; and the third, their view of the enormous
expenditure for pensions of Union soldiers, even as it was
fifteen years ago. But even the rather severe Victor, who reports
this proverb, finds Constantine "most excellent (commodissimus)
in many respects,"-in respect of certain laws, in his patronage
of the arts, especially that of letters, as scholar, as author,
in the hearing of delegations and complaints (p. 51). Again,
"Praxagoras, though a heathen, says that in all sorts of virtue
and personal excellence and good fortune, Constantine outshone
all the emperors who preceded him" (Photius, Cod. 62, ed.
Mueller, p. 1). And finally, the heathen Eutropius, who
characterizes from his standpoint so admirably, though he
naturally finds that "in the beginning of his reign he might have
been compared to the best princes; in the latter part, only to
those of middling character," nevertheless records "that
innumerable good qualities of mind and body were present in him,"
and that he was "deservedly enrolled among the gods,"-using the
meruit which he uses also of Aurelian, but not generally, and not
even of Constantius. On purely heathen testimony, therefore,
Constantine, taken by and large, was comparatively remarkable and
admirable. A moderate Christian characterization is that of
Theophanes (p. 29): "Pre-eminent for masculine strength of
character, penetration of mind, well-disciplined power of
thought; for unbending righteousness, ready benevolence, thorough
majestic beauty of countenance, mighty and successful in war,
great in wars with the barbarians, invincible in domestic wars,
and so firm and unshaken in faith that through prayer he obtained
the victory in all his battles." Remembering, therefore, that in
order to understand a character in past centuries one must
project himself into his time; remembering again the
circumstances of his time and its practice, we shall, without
forgetting any of the acts on which he has been judged, find him
on indisputable testimony superior to most of the other emperors
in character, and as much above the circumstances of his times as
would characterize a man of to-day as of peculiarly high moral
character. In view of this, it is uncritical, and a violence to
historical evidence, to approach one whom, at death, the heathen
thought worthy to be enrolled among the gods, and the Christians
canonized as saint (in the Greek calendar), as other than one
who, taken all in all, was of unusual excellence of character. As
in any synthesis, any organization, subordinate facts must be
viewed in their relation to their center and whole, as by any law
of criminal procedure acts must be judged in the light of general
character, so any rational, legal, scientific, historical
estimate of Constantine must be in view of this fact.
S:8.
Summary
With this as center of perspective, we have
a picture of Constantine with lights and shadows, to be sure, but
in the main true in its drawing and coloring. He was a man of
rather more than medium height, strongly built, with broad
shoulders, thick neck, and generally athletic and well-formed
figure. His piercing eye, slightly aquiline nose, scanty reddish
beard, and florid complexion, together with his bright
expression, made a countenance striking and even handsome. Of
great physical strength and vigor, he carried himself in a manly,
self-possessed, dignified, and serene manner, uniting a dignity
which might rise at times even to hauteur, or even incipient
arrogance, with a general and customary affability. His dress,
like his complexion, was somewhat florid. His mind was active,
alert, intense without being somber, penetrating, sound, fairly
cultivated, and well exercised in expression by pen or word. He
was animated, habile, and attentive in conversation,
self-possessed, steady, and calm in formal address. He was
pre-eminently a man of energy, intense and resistless, with a
determination to accomplish whatever he attempted, which rose
under opposition to irresistible impetuosity, and wrought a
courage which, in action, was absolutely fearless. His ambition
was limitless, but not wholly or even mainly selfish.
With his energy and ambition were united
the ballast of marked prudence, patience, perseverance,
faithfulness to details, steadfastness, and supreme self-control.
He was amiable and tactful, popular with his soldiers, and
careful to please. Toward those who came into his power he showed
habitual mildness and forbearance,-a mildness so great that he
was generally blamed for it; and toward all he showed great
kindness, justice, and a generosity which verged on the lavish.
He was open to the charge of over-generosity, almost of
prodigality, a good measure of real vanity, some over-insistence
on his own will and thought as the final standard of right, and
by no means free from mistakes or human weaknesses. He was a good
son, husband, father, a remarkably successful general, a
tolerable legislator, and a clear-sighted, firm-willed statesman.
In his religious life he abounded in creed and
confession-believing in the Trinity, the Divinity of Christ, the
Atonement, the Resurrection, and Eternal Life, in Repentance and
Faith, in love to God, and love to man. He preached his faith on
all occasions; he practiced thanksgiving and prayer abundantly.
He regarded everything that he had or was as from God. The
editor's brief judgment is that Constantine, for his time, made
an astonishingly temperate, wise, and, on the whole, benevolent
use of absolute power, and in morality, kindly qualities, and, at
last, in real Christian character, greatly surpassed most
nineteenth century politicians-standing to modern statesmen as
Athanasius to modern theologians.
Chapter III
Writings
S:1.
Introduction
Quite a number of works by this
emperor-author are extant. They may be grouped under, I.
Oratorical writings; 2. Letters and decrees; 3. Laws; 4.
Various.
S:2.
Oratorical Writings
According to Eusebius (V. C. 4. 29; cf. 4.
55) these were very numerous, and it may well be believed. He
seems to have done much of everything he undertook at
all-fighting, or learning, or building temples, or making laws,
he was nothing if not incessant. He had a habit of inflicting his
orations on his court, and undoubtedly had plenty of enthusiastic
hearers, as any emperor would, and as Eusebius says he did. They
seem to have been generally philosophical with as much religion
as possible worked in (V. C. 4. 9). Not many are extant, but we
have some account of the few following:
1. Oration to the saints (Oratio ad sanctum
coetum, S. C.). For this see the following translation and
Special Prolegomena.
2. Address to the Council of Nicaea in
praise of peace (Ad Syn. Nic.), in Euseb. V. C. 3. 12. Address of
welcome. He rejoices in the assembly, and exhorts them to be
united, that they may thereby please God and do a favor to their
emperor.
3. Oration to the Council of Nicaea, in
Gelasius, Hist. Coun. Nic. 1. 7. Begins with rhetorical
comparison of the Church to a temple, and ends with injunctions
to observe peace and to search the Scriptures as the authority in
all points of doctrine. Appears dubiously authentic.
4. Address to the bishops on their
departure from Nicaea. Abstract in Euseb. V. C. 32. 1. Exhorts
them to keep peace, cautions against jealousy, &c.
5. Funeral oration. A description in Euseb.
V. C. 4. 55. Dwells on the immortality of the soul, the blessings
laid up for those who love God, and the ruin of the
ungodly.
His method of composition is spoken of by
Eusebius (V. C. 4. 29), and his manner of delivery may be
gathered from Eusebius' description of his speech at the opening
of the Council of Nicaea (V. C. 3. 11). For the style of his
oratorical discourses, compare remarks on the Oration to the
Saints in the Special Prolegomena.
S:3.
Letters and Edicts
It is hard to separate between letters,
edicts, and laws. A substantial autocrat, the form of address was
much the same, and the force. The extant letters are quite
numerous, and those of which we have definite or general mention,
many. He seems to have been a most industrious letter-writer. Of
the extant letters a majority are undoubtedly or probably
genuine. Some, however, need more critical study than seems to
have been given to them. Following is the roughly chronological
list, the works being grouped by years. The dating is taken
mainly from the Migne edition, Ceillier, and Valesius with slight
original study. The descriptions are of course from the documents
themselves.
1. (313 a.d.) Edict of Constantine and
Licinius for the restoration of the Church. In Lact. De M. P. c.
48, and also in Euseb. H. E. 10. 5 (Op. Const. ed. Migne,
105-110). The second edict of toleration. The first edict (Euseb.
8. 17; Lact. De M. P. 34) can hardly be classed among the
"writings" of Constantine. This famous second edict grants full
religious liberty to the Christians and restoration of their
property. Compare section on Acts of Toleration in Wordworth's
Constantinus.
2. (313.) First letter of Constantine and
Licinius to Anulinus. In Euseb. H. E. 10. 5 (Op. Const. ed.
Migne, 479-480). Restores goods to the Catholic Christians;
written about the same time as the edict of toleration, according
to Ceillier.
3. (313.) Second Letter of Constantine to
Anulinus. In Euseb. H. E. 10. 7 (Op. Const. 481-2). Ordering that
the Catholic clergy be free from public service, that they might
not be disturbed in their worship of God.
4. (313.) Letter of Constantine to
Caecilianus. In Euseb. H. E. 10. 6 (Op. Const. 481-4). Presents
money-three thousand purses (folles)-to be distributed according
to direction of Hosius.
5. (313.) Letter of Constantine to
Melchiades (or Miltiades). In Euseb. H. E. 10. 5 (Op. Const. 477-
). Having received various letters from Anulinus regarding
Caecilian and the Donatists, he summons a council at Rome to
consider the matter.
6. (314.) Letter of Constantine to Ablavius
(or AElafius). In Optat. Mon. vet. p. 283-4 (Op. Const. 483-6).
The result of the council at Rome not having proved final, he
summons the Council of Arles.
7. (314.) Letter of Constantine to Chrestus
(Crescentius), bishop of Syracuse. In Euseb. H. E. 10. 5 (Op.
Const. 485-8). Invites to the Council of Arles.
8. (314.) Letter of Constantine to the
Bishops after the Council of Arles. In Optat. Mon. vet. p. 287-8
(Op. Const. 487-90). Contains gratulations, reprobations of
obstinate schismatists, and exhortations to patience with such
obstinateness. It is full of religious expressions, and if
genuine, is a most interesting exhibition of Constantine's
religious position at this time, but it looks suspicious, and
probably is not genuine.
9. (314) Letter of Constantine and Licinius
to Probianus, the Proconsul of Africa. In Augustine, Ep. 88 (ed.
Migne 33 3045), and also in Contr. Cresc. (43 540, also in Op.
Const. and tr. Engl. in Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers,
1, p. 370). Orders that the Donatist Ingentius be brought to his
court. One text adds Maximianus or Maximus in place of Maximus as
epithet of Constantine.
10. (314 or 315.) Letter of Constantine to
the Donatist Bishops. In Optat. Mon. vet. p. 290 (Op. Const. ed.
Migne 490). As the Donatists were not yet satisfied, he summons
them to meet Caecilian, and promises if they convict him in one
particular, it shall be as if in all.
11. (315.) Letter of Constantine to Celsus.
In Optat. Mon. vet p. 291 (Op. Const. 489-90). In reply to letter
mentioning disturbances of the Donatists, he hints that he
expects to go shortly to Africa and settle things
summarily.
12. (315.) Fragment of a Letter of
Constantine to Eumalius Vicarius. In Augustine's Contr. Crest. 3.
71 (ed. Migne 43 541; also Op. Const. 491-2). An extract of six
lines, in which he says Caecilianus was entirely
innocent.
13. (316 or 317.) Letter of Constantine to
the bishops and people of Africa. Optat. Mon. vet. p. 294 (Op.
Const. 491-2). He has tried every way to settle the Donatist
disturbances in vain, and now leaves them to God and advises
patience.
14. (323.) First Letter of Constantine to
Eusebius. In Euseb. V. C. 2. 46; Theodoret, 1. 14; Socr. 1. 9
(Op. Const. 491-4). Empowers the repairing, enlarging of old, and
building of new churches.
15. (323 a.d.) Law of Constantine
respecting piety toward God and the Christian Religion (Ad prov.
Pal.). In Euseb. V. C. 2. 24-42; abstr. in Soz. 1. 8 (Op. Const.
253-282). This long edict, addressed to the inhabitants of
Palestine, contains an exposition of the prosperity which attends
the righteous and the adversity which comes to the wicked,
followed by edict for the restitution of confiscated property,
the recall of exiles, and various other rectifications of
injustices. This is the copy, "or letter," sent to the heathen
population of the empire.
16. (324.) Constantine's edict to the
people of the eastern provinces concerning the error of
polytheism, &c. (Ad. prov. Or). In Euseb. V. C. 48- . This
letter, written in Latin and translated by Eusebius, begins with
"some general remarks on virtue and vice," touches on the
persecutions and the fate of the persecutors, expresses the wish
that all would become Christians, praises God, and exhorts
concord.
17. (323 or 324.) Letter of Constantine to
Alexander the Bishop and Arius the Presbyter. In Euseb. V. C. 2.
64-72; Gelas. 2. 4; Socr. 1. 7 (Op. Const. 493-502). Expresses
his desire for peace, his hope that they might have helped him in
the Donatist troubles, his distress at finding that they, too,
were in a broil, his opinion that the matters under discussion
are of little moment, and what he thinks they are. He exhorts to
unanimity, repeats his opinion that the matters are of little
moment, mentions his "copious and constant tears," and finally
gets through.
18. (324-5.) Letter to Porphyrius
(Optatian). In Migne, Patrol. Lat. 19 393-394 and in various
editions of Optatian. This letter to Porphyrius or Optatian was
on the occasion of the sending of a poem by the latter for his
vicennalia. It expresses his pleasure and his disposition to
encourage the cultivation of belles lettres. Compare note on
Optatian under sources.
19. (325.) Letter of Constantine the King,
summoning the bishops to Nicaea. In Cowper, Syriac Misc., Lond.
1841, p. 5-6. This is translated from a Syriac ms. in the British
Museum, written in 501. Gives as reason for the choice of Nicaea
the convenience for the European bishops and "the excellent
temperature of the air." This, if genuine, is the letter
mentioned by Eusebius, V. C., but it looks suspicious.
20. (325.) Letter of Constantine to the
churches after the Council of Nicaea. In Euseb. V. C. 3. 17-20;
Socr. 1. 9 (Op. Const. 501-506). Dwells on the harmonious result,
especially respecting the Easter controversy, and commends to the
bishops to observe what the Council has decreed.
21. (325.) Letter of Constantine to the
church of Alexandria. In Socr. 1. 9 (Op. Const. 507-510).
Expresses great horror of the blasphemy of Arius, and admiration
for the wisdom of the more than three hundred bishops who
condemned him.
22. (325.) Letter of Constantine to Arius
and the Arians. In "Conc. 2. 269." A long and rather railing
address against Arius.
23. (325.) Letter of Constantine to the
churches. In Socr. H. E. 1. 9. A translation of a Syriac
translation of this, written in 501, in Cowper, Syriac Misc.,
Lond. 1861, p. 6-7. Against Arius and the Porphyrians, and
threatens that any one who conceals a work of Arius shall be
punished with death.
24. (325.) Letter of Constantine to the
Nicomedians against Eusebius and Theognis. In Gelas. 3. 2;
Theodoret, 1. 20; Soz. 1. 21 (Op. Const. 519-524). A theological
discussion partly of the relation of Father and Son, and an
attack on Eusebius of Nicomedia.
25. (325.) Letter to Theodotus. In Gelas.
3. 3 (Op. Const. 523-524). Counsels him to take warning by what
has happened to Eusebius (of Nicomedia) and Theognis, i.e.
banishment, and get rid of such evil influence, if any, as they
may have had on him.
26. (325.) Letter of Constantine to
Macarius. In Euseb. V. C. 3. 30-32; Theodoret, 1. 16. Directs the
erection of a peculiarly magnificent church at the Holy Sepulcher
in Jerusalem.
27. (330.) Letter of Constantine to the
Numidian Bishops. In Optat. Mon. vet. p. 295 (Op. Const.
531-532). Concerns a church taken possession of by
schismatists.
28. (332.) Letter of Constantine to the
Antiochians. In Euseb. V. C. 3. 60 (Op. Const. 533- ). Exhorts
them not to persist in their effort to call Eusebius from
Caesarea to Antioch.
29. (332 a.d.) Letter of Constantine to the
Synod of Tyre deprecating the removal of Eusebius from Caesarea.
In Euseb. V. C. 362; Theodoret, 1. 27 (Op. Const.
543-546).
30. (332.) Second Letter of Constantine to
Eusebius. In Euseb. V. C. 3. 61 (Op. Const. 537-540). Commends
Eusebius for having declined the call to Antioch.
31. (332.) Second Letter of Constantine to
Macarius and the rest of the Bishops in Palestine (to Eusebius).
In Euseb. V. C. 3. 52-53 (Op. Const. 539-544). Directs the
suppression of idolatrous worship at Mamre.
32. (332.?) Edict against the heretics. In
Euseb. V. C. 3. 64-5. Against Novatians, Valentinians,
Marcionites, Paulians, Cataphrygians who are forbidden to
assemble and whose houses of worship are to be given to the
Catholic party.
33. (333.) Letter of Constantine to Sapor,
King of the Persians. In Euseb. 4. 9-13; Theodoret, 1. 24 (Op.
Const. 545-552). Is mainly a confession of faith commending the
Persian Christians to the special care of their king.
34. (333.) Letters of Constantine to
Antonius, the monk, and of Antonius to him are mentioned in
Athanasius, 1. 855 (Op. Const. 551-552). Constantine and his sons
write as to a father. Antony grudgingly replies with some good
advice for them to remember the day of judgment, regard Christ as
the only emperor, and have a care for justice and the
poor.
35. (333.) Letter of Constantine to
Eusebius in praise of his discourse concerning Easter. Eusebius,
V. C. 4. 35 (Op. Const. 551-554) praises the discourse and asks
for more.
36. (333.) Letter of Constantine to
Eusebius on the preparation of the copies of the Scriptures. In
Euseb. V. C. 4. 36; Theod. 1. 15; Socr. 1. 9 (Op. Const.
553-554). Orders fifty copies with directions as to
style.
37. (335.) Fragment of the first letter of
Constantine to Athanasius. In Athan. Apol.; Socr. 1. 27 (Op.
Const. 553-556; Tr. Engl. in Athan. Hist. Tracts, Oxf. 1843, p.
89). The letter summoning to the Council of Tyre, but only a
half-dozen lines remain. This bids him admit all who wish to
enter the church.
38. (335.) Letter of Constantine to the
people of the Alexandrian Church. In Athan. Apol. c. Ar. c. 61
(Op. Const. 559-562; abstract in Soz. 2. 31; Tr. Engl. in Athan.
Hist. Tracts, Oxf. 1850, p. 90-92). Is a general lamentation over
the dissensions of the Church, with expression of confidence in
Athanasius.
39. (335.) Second Letter of Constantine to
Athanasius. Athan. Apol. (Op. Const. 555-558). Expresses his
reprobation of the false accusations of the Meletians against
Athanasius.
40. (335.) Letter of Constantine to Joannes
the Meletian. Athan. Apol. (Op. Const. 557-560). Congratulates on
his reconciliation with Athanasius.
41. (335.) Letter of Constantine to Arius.
In Socr. 1. 25 (Op. Const. 561-562). Invites Arius to visit
him-the famous visit where he presented a confession of faith
claimed to be in conformity with that of Nicaea.
42. (335.) A Letter to Dalmatius is
mentioned by Athanasius, Apol. 5. 13, but not preserved (Op.
Const. 563-564; Tr. Engl. in Athan. Hist. Tracts, Oxf. 1850, p.
94). It required him to make judicial enquiry respecting the
charge against Athanasius of the murder of Arsenius.
43. (335.) Celebrated Letter of Constantine
concerning the Synod of Tyre. In Euseb. V. C. 3. 42 (Op. Const.
561-564). Exhorts the bishops to give zeal to fulfilling the
purpose of the synod in the restitution of peace to the
Church.
44. (335.) Letter to the Bishops assembled
at Tyre. In Socr. H. E. 1. 34, and in Soz. H. E. 2. 28. Summons
them to come to him at Constantinople and give account of their
proceedings.
Besides these there are the clearly
spurious:
1. Letter of Helena to Constantine (Op.
Const. 529-530).
2. Letter of Constantine in response to
Helena (Op. Const. 529-532).
3. Treaty of peace between Constantine,
Sylvester and Tiridates (Op. Const. 579-582). On Tiridates
compare various sources in Langlois Col. des historiens de . . .
l'Armenie, and for literature respecting their authenticity, his
note on p. 103.
4. Edict of Constantine to Pope Silvester
(Op. Const. 567-578). The famous Donation which first appeared in
Pseudo-Isidore, and for which see under The Mythical Constantine,
p. 442-3.
There are also quite a large number of
letters mentioned with more or less description, and a "multitude
of letters" (V. C. 3. 24) of which there is no specific
knowledge. Of the former may be mentioned that to the inhabitants
of Heliopolis, one to Valerius (or Valerianus or Verinus)
(Augustine, Ad Donat. p. c. c. 33); one to the Council of Tyre,
asking them to hasten to Jerusalem (V. C. 4. 43; Soz. 2. 26); and
one acknowledging the copies of the Scriptures prepared at his
order, through Eusebius (V. C. 4. 37).
S:4.
Laws
The numerous laws are collected in the
edition of Migne (Patrol. Lat. 8. p. 93-400), mainly from the
Theodosian code. They are in the opinion of Eutropius (10. 8)
"many," "some good and equitable, but most of them superfluous,
and some severe" (cf. under Character). Many of them show the
author's tendency to declamation, but taken all in all they are
businesslike and do credit, in the main, to their author's heart,
and even, though less conspicuously, to his head. For more
specific account, compare the laws themselves as collected in
Migne, the relating passages in Wordsworth and Ceillier, standard
and annotated editions of the codes, and special treatises, such
as Balduin, De leg. eccl. et civ. 1737.
S:5.
Various
Besides the more formal works mentioned
above, various conversations, sayings, bon mots, prayers,
&c., are preserved, among which may be mentioned:
1. Memoirs of himself, of which no portion
is extant. Writings of Constantine are mentioned by Lydus (p.
194, 226), but whether the writings referred to deserve the title
given by Burckhardt it is hard to say.
2. A form of prayer given by Constantine to
his soldiers (V. C. 4. 20).
3. His address when the memorials of
contendents, at Council of Nicaea, were brought to him (Soz. 1.
17).
4. The conversation with Acesius, for which
Socrates vouches, closing, "O Acesius, set up a ladder, and do
you alone climb up to heaven."
5. His rebuke to the courtier concerning
covetousness (V. C. 4. 30).
6. His answer when told his statues had
been stoned, "Strange, but I feel no wound" ("Chrysost. Ad Pop.
Ant.").
7. His appeal to the bishops, requesting
them to confer upon him the rite of baptism (V. C. 4.
62).
8. His Thanksgiving after baptism and
testimony (V. C. 4. 63).
In general, his writings were composed in
Latin, and translated into Greek by those appointed for this
special purpose (V. C. 4. 32). His general style is rhetorical,
rather profuse, and declamatory, abounding in pious allusion and
exhortation, as well as philosophical quotation and reflection.
His works are interesting to study and not without a touch here
and there of genuine literary interest. A remark on friendship,
for example, unless it be a product of his habit of borrowing the
thoughts of other men more or less directly, is delightful and
most quotable. "For it often happens," he says, "that when a
reconciliation is effected by the removal of the causes of
enmity, friendship becomes even sweeter than it was before"
(Const. to Alex. and Ar. in V. C. 2. 71).
Chapter IV
The Mythical Constantine
The many legends which have attached
themselves to the name of Constantine are valuable chiefly as
curiosities, and can be treated here only in specimens. A few of
the more interesting and important are the following:
1.
Constantine and his Mother Helena
A little anonymous work of some thirty
pages, edited by Heydenreich from a fourteenth-century
manuscript, was published under this title in 1879, and has drawn
forth an astonishing amount of literature for so slight a thing.
It has little value except as an illustration of mediaeval
romance, though Coen seems to think the honor of having
introduced it into literature enough to warrant the expenditure
of a good deal of pains in vindicating his claim to it. The story
is written with tolerable art, and runs, abbreviated, something
as follows:
Helena, daughter of a noble family of
Treves, came on a pious journey to Rome. The Emperor Constantius,
crossing a bridge of the Tiber, saw Helena among other pilgrims.
Struck with her beauty, he arranged that she should be detained
by force at the inn where she stayed, when her fellow-pilgrims
returned to Gaul. The emperor then constrained her by force, but,
seeing the great grief which his act had caused, gave her a
certain ornament of precious stones and his ring, as a sort of
pledge, and went away. She did not venture to return to her
country, but remained at Rome with the son who was born to her,
representing that her Gallic husband was dead. This son,
Constantine, grew up pleasing, handsome, and versatile. Certain
merchants, seeing his excellent quality, formed a scheme of
making money by palming him off on the emperor of the Greeks as a
son-in-law, representing him to be a son of the Roman
emperor.
The scheme was carried out, and the
merchants after some time embarked again for Rome, with the
Constantine and the princess, and much treasure. Toward the end
of their journey they stopped over night at a little island. In
the morning the young people awoke to find they had been deserted
by the merchants, and Constantine in great grief confessed the
deception which had been practiced. To this the princess replied
that she cared little who he was or his family, since he was
himself and her husband. After a few days of short rations they
were taken by passing voyagers to Rome, where they joined Helena,
and having purchased a house with the proceeds from the sale of
certain valuables which the princess had kept with her, they went
to hotel-keeping. Constantine took naturally to military life,
and at tournaments surpassed everyone else so far as to arouse
astonishment and inquiry. The emperor would not believe him a
poor and friendless man, and had his mother called. After much
vigorous evasion the truth came out, confirmed by the ring which
the emperor had given Helena. Constantius first had the merchants
put to death, and gave all their property to Constantine. Then a
treaty was made with the emperor of the East, and Constantine was
recognized as heir to the empire.
A more wildly unhistorical historical novel
could hardly have been written even by a Muhlbach. For further
account, see under Literature especially articles by Heydenreich
and by Coen.
2.
Constantine the Son of a British Princess
Duke Coel of Colchester, say the old
chronicles, by an insurrection became king. The Senate, rejoiced
at the overthrow of an enemy, sent Constantius to Britain. Coel,
fearing, sent ambassadors to meet him, gave hostages, and shortly
died. Constantius was crowned, married Helena, daughter of Coel,
the most beautiful, cultivated, and educated woman of her time.
By her he had a son, Constantine, afterwards called the Great.
This is in substance the account of Geoffrey of Monmouth (5. 6)
and Pierre de Langloft (1, p. 66-7). The story is mentioned by
Henry of Huntington (Bk. I. 37), who perhaps wrote before
Geoffrey (in 1137 [?]), and Richard of Cirencester (2. 1. 33).
Waurin (Vol. I. Bk. 2. 43) makes "Choel" Count of Leicester, but
in general is identical with Geoffrey. The famous Brut of Layamon
(ed. Madden, 2 p. 35) is translated with amplifications from
Wace's Brut, and this in turn from Geoffrey. This makes Coel Earl
of Gloucester. The Eulogium Hist. calls Helena (1. 337) daughter
of a British king, but also concubine, though elsewhere (2, p.
267) she is wife according to the conventional story. It is also
mentioned by many others; e.g. Voragine, Golden Legend. It is
interesting that this legendary father of Helena is supposed
(Hayden, Index to Eulogium, p. 45, and Giles, note on Geoffrey,
p. 162) to be the same as "Old King Cole, the merry old soul,"
making Constantine thus the grandson of the Mother Goose
hero.
3.
Constantine's Leprosy; Healing and Baptism by
Silvester
This tale is one of the most frequently
found. The earliest account is said to be that of the Acts of
Silvester. Some of the many who repeat it are Ephraem, Cedrenus,
Zonaras. The following account is mainly from Glycas, p.
461-462.
When Constantine was fighting against
Maxentius, after he had seen the sign of the cross, he was
victorious. Then, forgetting, he was conquered, and grieving, he
fell asleep and had a vision in which the blow of a switch on his
nostrils brought blood which flowed down on his linen tunic in
the form of a cross. Seeing this, he was filled with penitence,
and became again victorious. Being led away a second time into
idolatry through his wife Fausta, he was divinely afflicted with
leprosy. The priests prescribed a bath in the blood of infants,
and it was ordered; but when he heard the lamentations of the
mothers, he said it was better to suffer than that so many
infants should perish. Therefore the apostles, Peter and Paul as
some say, appeared to him and told him Silvester would cure him,
as he did. There are many varieties of the story and various
details as to baptism, but in general the whole series of stories
regarding his baptism at Rome centers in this story, and
gratitude for this cure is the supposed occasion of the famous
donation of Constantine. In this the circumstances of the miracle
are given at length,-the words of the apostles, Silvester's
identification of them as apostles by portraits, the immersion,
and subsequent instruction.
4.
Donation of Constantine
This most remarkable of forgeries for its
practical effect on world-history has been the subject of endless
discussion. It is, in brief, a supposed grant to the Pope of
Rome, Silvester, of certain sweeping privileges in recognition of
the miracle he has wrought. The edict gives a long confession of
faith followed by an account of the miracle and mention of the
churches he has built. Then follow the grants to Silvester,
sovereign Pontiff and Pope of Rome, and all his successors until
the end of the world,-the Lateran palace, the diadem, phryginus,
the purple mantle and scarlet robe, imperial scepters, insignia,
banners and the whole imperial paraphernalia, as well as various
clerical privileges and pretty much the whole world to govern. It
is impossible here even to represent in outline the history of
this extraordinary fiction. Composed not earlier than the latter
part of the eighth century (Martens et alt. 9 cent.; Grauert,
840-850; Hauck, Bonneau, 752-757; Langen, 778, &c.; Friedrich
acc. to Seeberg, divides into an earlier and a later portion), it
early came to be general, though not unquestioned, authority. In
1229-1230 a couple of unfortunates who ventured to doubt its
authenticity were burned alive at Strasburg (Documents
communicated by Ristelhuber to Bonneau p. 57-58). Not many years
after, Dante seems (Inf. 19. 115) to have taken its authenticity
for granted; and although there is a possible doubting (De
Monarch. 4. 10), he does not venture to dispute this. He denies,
however, Constantine's power or right to give, if he did give. In
modern times the fictitious character of the document is
recognized by Protestants and Catholics alike, and the
discussion, so vigorous formerly, over this authenticity has
narrowed itself chiefly to a discussion of the place (France or
Rome) and date (653-753, ninth century) and possible author. The
discussion over these points has been lately renewed and is being
carried on with animation. Among the later monographs are those
of Martens (1889) and Friedrich (1889, not at hand). The latest
treatise at hand is that of Seeberg in the Theol. Literaturbl. of
Jan. 17. 24. 31 of the current year. For farther select
literature, compare Verzeichniss in Martens; for sources, the
chapters of Martens and Preface of Bonneau; for older literature,
Muensch. p. 96-97, and in general the Literature of Constantine,
in this volume, although no attempt has been made to exhaust the
literature of this sub-topic there. Treatises on the Donation
will be found under the names of Albani, Altus, Arrhenius,
Bachmann, Bayet, Bonneau, Brunner, Chaulnes, Colombier, Cusa,
Friedrich, Genelin, Grauert, Hauck, Hildebrand, Jacobatius,
Kaufman, Krueger, Martens, Muench, Rallaye, Scheffer-Boichorst,
Seeberg, Steuchus, Tacut, Valla, Walther, Wieland,
Zeumer.
5. Dream
concerning the Founding of Constantinople
"As Constantine was sleeping in this city
[Byzantium], he imagined that there stood before him an old woman
whose forehead was furrowed with age; but that presently, clad in
an imperial robe, she became transformed into a beautiful girl,
and so fascinated his eyes by the elegance of her youthful charms
that he could not refrain from kissing her; that Helena, his
mother, being present, then said, She shall be yours forever; nor
shall she die till the end of time.' The solution of this dream,
when he awoke, the emperor extorted from heaven, by fasting and
alms-giving. And behold, within eight days, being cast again into
a deep sleep, he thought he saw Pope Silvester, who died some
little time before, regarding his convert with complacency, and
saying, You have acted with your customary prudence in waiting
for a solution from God of that enigma which was beyond the
comprehension of man. The old woman you saw is this city, worn
down by age, whose time-struck walls, menacing approaching ruin,
require a restorer. But you, renewing its walls, and its
affluence, shall signalize it also with your name; and here shall
the imperial progeny reign forever'" (William of Malmesbury,
Chronicle, tr. English. Lond. 1847, p. 372-3. The final section,
which instructs Constantine how to lay out the city, is omitted).
This is taken by the Chronicler from Aldhelm's (d. 709) de
laudibus virginitatis (c. 52, ed. Giles, 1844, p. 28-29), where,
however, instead of kissing her, he much more appropriately
"clothes her with his mantle, and puts his diadem adorned with
pure gold and brilliant gems on her head." It is given also by
Ralph de Diceto (ed. Stubbs, Lond. 1876), 74-75, and probably by
many others.
6.
Voyage of Helena
A matter-of-fact account of things which
are not so, given in Hakluyt's Voyages, 2 (1810), p. 34, is worth
giving in the words of the translator:
"Helena Flavia Augusta, the heire and onely
daughter of Coelus, sometime the most excellent king of Britaine,
by reason of her singular beautie, faith, religion, goodnesse,
and godly Maiestie (according to the testimonie of Eusebius) was
famous in all the world. Amongst all the women of her time there
was none either in the liberall arts more learned, or in the
instruments of musike more skilfull, or in the divers languages
of nations more abundant than herselfe. She had a naturall
quicknesse of wit, eloquence of speech, and a most notable grace
in all her behaviour. She was seene in the Hebrew, Greeke, and
Latin tongues. Her father (as Virumnius reporteth) had no other
childe, . . . had by her a sonne called Constantine the great,
while hee remained in Britaine . . . peace was granted to the
Christian churches by her good meanes. After the light and
knowledge of the Gospel, she grew so skilfull in divinity that
she wrote and composed divers bookes and certaine Greeke verses
also, which (as Ponticus reporteth) are yet extant . . . went to
Jerusalem . . . lived to the age of fourscore years, and then
died at Rome the fifteenth day of August, in the yeere of oure
redemption 337 . . . Her body is to this day very carefully
preserved at Venice."
7. The
Finding of the Cross
It is said in a certain "tolerably
authentic chronicle," according to Voragine, that Constantine
sent his mother Helena to Jerusalem to try to find the cross on
which our Lord was crucified. When she arrived, she bade all the
Jewish Rabbis of the whole land gather to meet her. Great was
their fear. They suspected that she sought the wood of the cross,
a secret which they had promised not to reveal even under
torture, because it would mean the end of Jewish supremacy. When
they met her, sure enough, she asked for the place of the
crucifixion. When they would not tell, she ordered them all to be
burned. Frightened, they delivered up Judas, their leader and
instigator, saying that he could tell. She gave him his choice of
telling or dying by starvation. At first he was obstinate, but
six days of total abstinence from food brought him to terms, and
on the seventh he promised. He was conducted to the place
indicated, and in response to prayer, there was a sort of
earthquake, and a perfume filled the air which converted Judas.
There was a temple of Venus on the spot. This the queen had
destroyed. Then Judas set to digging vigorously, and at the depth
of twenty feet, found three crosses, which he brought to Helena.
The true cross was tested by its causing a man to rise from the
dead, or according to others, by healing a woman, or according to
others, by finding the inscription of Pilate. After an
exceedingly vigorous conversation between the devil and Judas,
the latter was baptized and became Bishop Cyriacus. Then Helena
set him hunting for the nails of the cross. He found them shining
like gold and brought them to the queen, who departed, taking
them and a portion of the wood of the cross. She brought the
nails to Constantine, who put them on his bridle and helmet, or
according to another account, two were used in this way, and one
was thrown into the Adriatic Sea.
It is interesting to trace the melancholy
consequences of this particular enterprise of Constantine's in
the sad death of St. Cyriacus nee Judas. The Emperor Julian, the
apostate, "invited" him to sacrifice to idols. When he refused,
melted lead was poured into his mouth; then an iron bedstead was
brought, on which he was stretched, while a fire was built
underneath and the body of the martyr larded with salt and fat.
The saint did not budge, and Julian had a deep well dug, which
was filled with venomous serpents. But contact with the saint
killed the serpents, and a cauldron of boiling oil succeeded.
Julian was so angry at the alacrity and cheerfulness of the
saint's preparations for this bath, that he killed him with a
blow of his sword. There is some consolation in the thought of
this premature death, in the fact that, unless his claim that he
was nephew to Stephen, the Proto-martyr, be disallowed, he had
reached a ripe old age of two hundred and fifty years or
thereabouts.
The literature on this legend is very
great. The finding of the cross is mentioned as early as Cyril of
Jerusalem (ab. 347-350), within twenty-five years of the visit of
Helena recorded by Eusebius (V. C. 3. 26), and with great
frequency afterwards. The failure of any mention by Eusebius
seems, however, conclusive against any finding, or pretended
finding, at the time of Helena's famous visit, though the
contrary is acutely argued by Newman. The finding and use of the
nails is often separated from the other, and is found in many of
the sources on Constantine. But even those who believe in the
miracle of the finding of the cross will hardly vouch for the
story in the above form, which is substantially that of
Voragine.
Compare Sinker's article, Cross, Finding
of, in Smith and Cheetham, Dict. 1 (1880), 503-506; Jameson,
Hist. of Our Lord, 2 (1872) 385-391; Newman, Essays on Miracles
(Lond. 1875) 287-326; and especially Voragine, whom see under
Sources. Under the article Helena, in Smith & W. is a
sub-article by Argles on the Invention of the Cross, which gives
an admirable abstract of the sources in order.
These examples of the stories which have
gathered around the name of Constantine do not begin to exhaust
the list. The interesting tales of the sword of Constantine
presented to Athelstan (Reg. Malms. 1, 1879, p. 55, 468; Eul.
Hist. 3, 1863, p. 12), his conversion through remorse, and the
whole series of allusions and stories in mediaeval fiction and
poetry must be passed here. If any one has the curiosity to
follow them up, he will find the references in the articles of
Heydenreich a good guide to literature. A few stories, like that
of Constantine and Tiridates, one hesitates to class among the
wholly fictitious (compare, under Sources, Agathangelos,
Zenobius, and Faustus).