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See also: Roman See also: empire, was See also: born about A.D
.
505, in "Germania,"
a See also: district on the See also: borders of See also: Thrace and See also: Macedonia
.
His name is supposed to be See also: Slavonic
.
As a youth he served in the See also: body-guard of Justinian, who appointed him See also: commander of the Eastern army
.
He won a See also: signal victory over the Persians in 530, and successfully conducted a See also: campaign against them, until forced, by the rashness of his soldiers, to join See also: battle and suffer defeat in the following See also: year
.
Recalled to Constantinople, he married Antonina, a See also: clever, intriguing woman, and a favourite of the empress See also: Theodora
.
During the sedition of the " See also: green " and "blue" parties of the circus (known as the Nika sedition, 532) he did Justinian See also: good service, effectually crushing the rebels who had proclaimed Hypatius emperor
.
In 533 the command of the expedition against the Vandal See also: kingdom in See also: Africa, a perilous office, which the rest of the imperial generals shunned, was conferred on See also: Belisarius
.
With 15,00o mercenaries, whom he had to train into Roman discipline, he took See also: Carthage, defeated Gelimer the Vandal See also: king, and carried him
See also: captive, in 534, to See also: grace the first See also: triumph witnessed in Constantinople
.
In See also: reward for these services Belisarius was invested with the consular dignity, and medals were struck in his honour
.
At this See also: time the Ostrogothic kingdom, founded in See also: Italy by See also: Theodoric the See also: Great, was shaken by See also: internal dissensions, of which Justinian resolved to avail himself
.
Accordingly, Belisarius invaded See also: Sicily; and, after storming Naples and defending See also: Rome for a year against almost the entire strength of the Goths in Italy, he concluded the war by the capture of See also: Ravenna, and with it of the See also: Gothic king Vitiges
.
So conspicuous were Belisarius's heroism and military skill that the See also: Ostrogoths offered to acknowledge him emperor of the West
.
But his See also: loyalty did not waver; he rejected the proposal and returned to Constantinople in 540
.
Next year he was sent to check the Persian king See also: Chosroes (Annshirvan); but, thwarted by the turbulence of his troops, he achieved no decisive result
.
On his return to Constantinople he lived under a cloud for some time, but was pardoned through the influence of Antonina with the empress
.
The Goths having meanwhile reconquered Italy, Belisarius was despatched with utterly inadequate forces to oppose them
.
Nevertheless, during five See also: campaigns he held his enemies at See also: bay, until he was removed from the command, and the conclusion of the war was entrusted to the See also: eunuch Narses
.
Belisarius remained at Constantinople in tranquil retirement until 559, when an incursion of Bulgarian savages spread a panic through the metropolis, and men's eyes were once more turned towards the neglected See also: veteran, who placed himself at the See also: head of a mixed multitude of peasants and soldiers, and repelled the barbarians with his wonted courage and adroitness
.
But this, like his former victories, stimulated Justinian's envy
.
The saviour of his country was coldly received and See also: left unrewarded by his suspicious See also: sovereign
.
Shortly after-wards Belisarius was accused of complicity in a conspiracy against the emperor (562); his See also: fortune was confiscated, and he was confined as a prisoner in his palace
.
He was liberated and restored to favour in 563, and died in 565
.
The fiction of Belisarius wandering as a See also: blind See also: beggar through the streets of Constantinople, which has been adopted by See also: Marmontel in his Belisaire, and by various painters and poets, is first heard of in the loth century
.
See also: Gibbon justly calls Belisarius the See also: Africanus of New Rome
.
He was merciful as a conqueror, stern as a disciplinarian, enterprising and wary as a general; while his courage, loyalty and forbearance seem to have been almost unsullied
.
He was the idol of his soldiers, a good tactician, but not a great strategist
.
AuTHORITIES.—Procopius, De Bellis and Historia Arcana (best edition by J
.
Maury, 1905, 1907) ; see Gibbon, Decline and Fall (ed
.
See also: Bury, vol
.
4) ; T
.
See also: Hodgkin, Italy and her Invaders (vol
.
4) ; J
.
B
.
Bury, Later Roman Empire, vol. i.; Diehl, Justinien (See also: Paris, 1901)
.
(J
.
B . |
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