The Secret History by Procopius

Z...

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
intro said:
Procopius of Caesarea (in Palestine) [born c.490/507- died c.560s] is the most important source for information about the reign of the emperor Justinian [born 482/3, ruled. 527-565] and his wife Theodora [d. 547/8].
He wrote a number of official histories, including On the Wars in eight books [Polemon or De bellis], published 552, with an addition in 554, and On the Buildings in six books [Peri Ktismaton or De aedificiis], published 561. He also left a "Secret History" [Anecdota, i.e. "unpublished things", not "anecdotes"], probably written c. 550 and published after his death, which was a massive attack on the character of Justinian and his wife Theodora. Parts are so vitriolic, not to say pornographic [esp. Chapter 9], that for some time translations from Greek were only available into Latin [Gibbon - in Ch. 40 of Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire wrote about Theodora that "her arts must be veiled in the obscurity of a learned language ", and then went on to quote the passage in Greek with Latin comments!]

The Secret History claims to provide explanations and additions that the author could not insert into his work on the Wars for fear of retribution from Justinian and Theodora. Since both before and afterward, Procopius wrote approvingly of the emperor, it was suggested in the past that he was not the author of the work, but it is now generally accepted that Procopius wrote it. Analysis of text, which show no contradictions in point of fact between the Secret History and the other works, as well a linguistic and grammatical analysis makes this a conclusive opinion.

by sheer accident I stumbled across these essays , those interested in medieval history and especialy byzantine will find it particularly interesting.
It is freely available here
Medieval Sourcebook=http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/procop-anec.HTML

Certainly very interesting account of Justinian and Theodora, here is just a little teaser, it fits well into hypothesis that human kind through psychopaths, has always been ruled by dodgy hyper dimensional entities :

Procopius of Cesarea said:
12. PROVING THAT JUSTINIAN AND THEODORA WERE ACTUALLY FIENDS IN HUMAN FORM
For when one examines closely, there is a clear difference between what is human and what is supernatural. There have been many enough men, during the whole course of history, who by chance or by nature have inspired great fear, ruining cities or countries or whatever else fell into their power; but to destroy all men and bring calamity on the whole inhabited earth remained for these two to accomplish, whom Fate aided in their schemes of corrupting all mankind. For by earthquakes, pestilences, and floods of river waters at this time came further ruin, as I shall presently show. Thus not by human, but by some other kind of power they accomplished their dreadful designs.

And they say his mother said to some of her intimates once that not of Sabbatius her husband, nor of any man was Justinian a son. For when she was about to conceive, there visited a demon, invisible but giving evidence of his presence perceptibly where man consorts with woman, after which he vanished utterly as in a dream.

And some of those who have been with Justinian at the palace late at night, men who were pure of spirit, have thought they saw a strange demoniac form taking his place. One man said that the Emperor suddenly rose from his throne and walked about, and indeed he was never wont to remain sitting for long, and immediately Justinian's head vanished, while the rest of his body seemed to ebb and flow; whereat the beholder stood aghast and fearful, wondering if his eyes were deceiving him. But presently he perceived the vanished head filling out and joining the body again as strangely as it had left it.

Another said he stood beside the Emperor as he sat, and of a sudden the face changed into a shapeless mass of flesh, with neither eyebrows nor eyes in their proper places, nor any other distinguishing feature; and after a time the natural appearance of his countenance returned. I write these instances not as one who saw them myself, but heard them from men who were positive they had seen these strange occurrences at the time.

They also say that a certain monk, very dear to God, at the instance of those who dwelt with him in the desert went to Constantinople to beg for mercy to his neighbors who had been outraged beyond endurance. And when he arrived there, he forthwith secured an audience with the Emperor; but just as he was about to enter his apartment, he stopped short as his feet were on the threshold, and suddenly stepped backward. Whereupon the eunuch escorting him, and others who were present, importuned him to go ahead. But he answered not a word; and like a man who has had a stroke staggered back to his lodging. And when some followed to ask why he acted thus, they say he distinctly declared he saw the King of the Devils sitting on the throne in the palace, and he did not care to meet or ask any favor of him.

Indeed, how was this man likely to be anything but an evil spirit, who never knew honest satiety of drink or food or sleep, but only tasting at random from the meals that were set before him, roamed the palace at unseemly hours of the night, and was possessed by the quenchless lust of a demon?

Furthermore some of Theodora's lovers, while she was on the stage, say that at night a demon would sometimes descend upon them and drive them from the room, so that it might spend the night with her. And there was a certain dancer named Macedonia, who belonged to the Blue party in Antioch, who came to possess much influence. For she used to write letters to Justinian while Justin was still Emperor, and so made away with whatever notable men in the East she had a grudge against, and had their property confiscated.

This Macedonia, they say, greeted Theodora at the time of her arrival from Egypt and Libya; and when she saw her badly worried and cast down at the ill treatment she had received from Hecebolus and at the loss of her money during this adventure, she tried to encourage Theodora by reminding her of the laws of chance, by which she was likely again to be the leader of a chorus of coins. Then, they say, Theodora used to relate how on that very night a dream came to her, bidding her take no thought of money, for when she should come to Constantinople, she should share the couch of the King of the Devils, and that she should contrive to become his wedded wife and thereafter be the mistress of all the money in the world. And that this is what happened is the opinion of most people.
 
I published the complete "Secret History" of Procopius back in 2003 in the "Truth or Lies" series with the following introduction and background:

November 20, 2003: Historians, when writing about history, not only discuss the theoretical facts that are being proposed as the timeline, but also the means by which they arrived at their ideas. Generally, they draw their conclusions about history by reading "sources," or earlier accounts of the matter at hand. In some cases these are eye-witness accounts, in others, accounts told to a scribe by a witness, and so on.

Historians try to make a distinction between sources as "primary" and "secondary." A primary source is not necessarily an eye-witness account - though it would be nice if it was - but is defined by historians as one that cannot be traced back any further and does not seem to depend on someone else's account. Secondary sources are those that are essentially copies or "re-worked" primary sources. Often, they consist of material from several sources assembled together with commentary or additional data.

Well, obviously this could present a problem if the primary source is completely falsified.

Primary sources can legitimately require interpretation and assessment; this is the role of a good secondary source, providing the distinction between source and interpretation is made clear. Indeed secondary sources - analyses - are vital to the average reader who may not have the necessary linguistic, historical and cultural background to assess the primary sources.

But, all too often, historians deal with their sources exactly as Huysmans has described, which bears repeating:

Events are for a man of talent nothing but a spring-board of ideas and style, since they are all mitigated or aggravated according to the needs of a cause or according to the temperament of the writer who handles them.

As far as documents which support them are concerned, it is even worse, since none of them is irreducible and all are reviewable. If they are not just apocryphal, other no less certain documents can be unearthed later which contradict them, waiting in turn to be devalued by the unearthing of yet other no less certain archives. [Huysmans, 1891, Ch II].

Let's talk about the Emperor Justinian now. A reader of the Catholic Encyclopedia will discover the following praises of Justinian:

The thirty-eight years of Justinian's reign are the most brilliant period of the later empire. Full of enthusiasm for the memories of Rome, he set himself, and achieved, the task of reviving their glory.

The many-sided activity of this wonderful man may be summed up under the headings: military triumphs, legal work, ecclesiastical polity, and architectural activity. Dominating all is the policy of restoring the empire, great, powerful, and united. [...]

Justinian also acquired immortal fame by the impetus he gave to the arts. If any style can ever be ascribed to one man, what we call Byzantine architecture, at least in its perfect form, owes its origin to Justinian and the architects he employed. His activity in building was prodigious. He covered his empire from Ravenna to Damascus with superb monuments. All later building in East and West was derived from his models; two most famous schools, our medieval (Gothic) and the Moslem styles, are the lineal descendants of Justinian's architecture. Of his many buildings may be mentioned the two most famous, the church of Our Lady (now the El-Aqsa mosque) at Jerusalem and, by far the most splendid of all, the great church of the Holy Wisdom (Hagia Sophia) at Constantinople. This church especially, built by Anthemius of Tralles and Isidore of Miletus, and consecrated on 27 December, 537, remains always one of the chief monuments of architecture in the world. [...]

Justinian died in November, 565. He was undoubtedly the greatest emperor after Constantine, perhaps the greatest of all the long line of Roman Caesars.

Indeed one may question whether any state can show in its history so magnificent a ruler.

His glorious memory lasted through all the ages after him and his portrait gleams still from the mosaic in S. Vitale at Ravenna, where he stands in his toga and diadem, surrounded by his court, with a bishop at his side the very type of the majesty of Christian Rome on the Bosporus.

He sounds like a veritable paragon, eh? Of course, everything wasn't all positive, as the Catholic Encyclopedia notes:

The Catholic cannot applaud the great emperor's ecclesiastical polity, though in this, too, we recognize the statesman's effort to promote peace and union within the empire. [...]

The Corpus Juris is full of laws against paganism (apostasy was punished by death), Jews, Samaritans (who began a dangerous revolt in 529), Manichaeans, and other heretics. The decrees of the four general councils were incorporated in the civil law. There was no toleration of dissent.

True to the ideal of Constantinople, the emperor conceived himself as "priest and king", supreme head on earth in matters ecclesiastical as well as in the State. [...]

And all through his reign he fell foul of the authority of the Church by his attempts to conciliate the Monophysites. [...] These heretics filled Syria and Egypt, and were a constant source of disunion and trouble to the empire. Justinian was one of the many emperors who tried to reconcile them by concessions.

Justinians ecclesiastical "confusion" is blamed on his wife:

His wife Theodora was a secret Monophysite; influenced by her, the emperor, while maintaining Chalcedon, tried to satisfy the heretics by various compromises. [...] In all this story Justinian appears as a persecutor of the Church, and takes his place, unhappily, among the semi-Monophysite tyrants who caused the long series of quarrels and schisms that were the after-effect of Monophysitism. His ecclesiastical tyranny is the one regrettable side of the character of so great a man.

What is a Monophysite?

Monophysites believed that Jesus' human nature was transformed, subsumed, into a Divine Nature, thus the term "monophysite," or "one-natured."

This idea was in direct conflict with the dogma adopted by the church that in Christ, there is ONE divine Person, and TWO distinct natures: one fully human and one that was fully divine.

The earliest instances of monophysitism were not condemned and were, in fact, advocated by a number of prominent Church leaders, like Cyril. The monophysite view that Jesus had a single nature was eventually condemned at the Council of Chalcedon (451) which asserted that Jesus had both a Divine and a Human nature combined in a single person. Some tried to avoid being condemned as heretics by asserting that Jesus may have had two natures technically, the Human nature was so subsumed by the Divine nature that the practical effect was a single nature.

Well, it is easy to see why this was so touchy a point. If Christ was supposed to have been transformed into a Divine Being, then of course, his "heirs," i.e. the Emperors, would have to be similarly transformed and would not be able to be just a normal human with claims to another "divine nature" that he could put on and take off at will.

A genuine schismatic movement of Monophysites did not appear until after the Second Council of Constantinople (553) which required acceptance of the formulation decided upon at Chalcedon and some simply refused. They were the precursors of the present-day Syrian and Armenian Orthodox churches. In 1984, the patriarch of the Syrian Orthodox church (Mar Ignatius Zakka II) met with Pope John Paul II and together they signed a new declaration which stated the difference in their dogmas were more apparent than real and ultimately based upon cultural and linguistic "inadequacies."

Getting back to Justinian, regarding his great building projects:

Naturally these great enterprises demanded great expense. Justinian's subjects frequently complained of the heavy taxes; many people in the lands he conquered back thought that the glory of being once more Roman citizens was bought too dearly when they realized how much they had to pay to the Roman exchequer.

One of the things that Justinian is most famous for was his legal code:

The most enduring work of Justinian was his codification of the laws. This, too, was an important part of his general scheme. The great empire he was reconquering must have the strength of organized unity. He says in the edict of promulgation of his laws that a state rests on arms and law ("De Justin. Cod. Confirmando", printed in front of the codex).

The scattered decrees of his predecessors must then be collected in a well-ordered and complete codex, logically arranged, so that every Roman citizen could learn at once the law of the empire on any subject. This codification was Justinian's great work. He made many new laws himself, but his enduring merit is rather the classification of scattered older laws.

The Catholic Encyclopedia finds that it cannot avoid mentioning Justinian's scandalous life and basically blames it on his wife because, of course, she was a Monophysite:

The emperor's private life is somewhat clouded by the scandals told of his wife, Theodora. She had been a dancing-girl; there is no doubt that she had led an immoral life before her marriage in 523. She was also a Monophysite. But most scholars now reject the scandalous account of her married life given by Procopius in his "Secret History". And in January, 532, at the time of the Circus revolution that nearly wrecked the state, it was Theodora's courage and presence of mind that saved the situation. For the rest she had a hand in all her husband's policy; administration, diplomacy, church affairs, etc., felt her influence for twenty-one years. If she did not dishonor Justinian by infidelity she certainly led him into semi-Monophysitism (see Diehl, Theodora, imperatrice de Byzance," Paris, 1904).

It is said that the reign of Justinian was a turning-point in Late Antiquity. It was the period when paganism finally lost its long battle to survive, and when the schism in Christianity between the Monophysite east and the Chalcedonian west became insurmountable.

From a military viewpoint, it marked the last time that the Roman Empire could dominate the known world. Africa and Italy were reconquered, and a presence was established in Spain. When Justinian died, the frontiers were still intact although the Balkans had been devastated by a series of raids and the Italian economy was a disaster.

Now, let's come back to Procopius mentioned above as having slandered Justinian and Theodora with his "Secret History."

Procopius of Caesarea was born in the late fifth century in Palestine. Nobody knows who his parents were or where or how he was educated. It is known that he was qualified for civil service in Byzantium by virtue of some sort of legal and literary training. As early as A.D. 527 he became counsellor, assessor, and secretary to the great General Belisarius, whose fortunes and campaigns he followed for the next twelve or fifteen years.

To Procopius we owe thanks for his eyewitness's description of Belisarius's wars, in eight books. Of these, two deal with the Persian war, two with the Vandalic, three with the Gothic; Book VIII concludes with a general survey of events down to A.D. 554.

Procopius wrote about more than military matters, however. He is the best authority for the history of Justinian's reign, and the historian, Gibbon, regretted the fact that the histories subsequent to Procopius were written by less intelligent and insightful individuals.

Procopius was evidently widely read in all the greatest of the Greek historians and geographers, and he was familiar with the works of the famous Greek poets and orators. But his unique value lies in the fact that he personally knew the people, the places, and the events of which he wrote.

Procopius' approach to his task is critical and independent though it is clear he was required to please his employer and certainly the Court. His account of "Justinian's Buildings" was completed in A.D. 558 or 559 and it is thought that he wrote it either by imperial command or to vindicate himself from suspicions of disaffection. In an extravagant way, he credits Justinian with all the public works executed in the entire Eastern Empire during his reign.

What we are most particularly interested in is the third of his books. This work is scandalously famous and there has been a great deal of controversy as to whether it was authentic and what were Procopius' motives in writing it. This book is most commonly known by the title of "Arcana Historia" (the secret history). It is a supplement to the other history, carrying the narrative down to the year 558-9, where it breaks off. Into it, as into the pages of a private journal, Procopius pours his detestation of Justinian and Theodora; even Belisarius and his wife are not spared.

One expert describes this book as "a satirical attack on Justinian." and the Catholic Encyclopedia says:

It is a bitter, malignant, and often obscene invective against all the powers of the Byzantine Church and State, apparently the tardy revenge of an ill-conditioned man of letters for a lifetime of obsequiousness. The indiscriminate violence of the pamphlet betrays the writer's passionate indignation, but spoils his case. The authenticity is now generally allowed, after a great deal of not unbiased discussion in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. (The "Anecdota" was first published in 1623.)

We ought to note that the Secret History of Procopius was not published during his lifetime and most certainly not during the lifetimes of those about whom he was writing. That pretty much demolishes the theory that it was a "tardy revenge of an ill-conditioned man ... for a lifetime of obsequiousness." What good is revenge if there is no one to receive it or to enjoy it? Yes, it was certainly vitriolic and pornographic in parts. For a long time, translations from Greek were only available into Latin and Gibbon - in Ch. 40 of Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire - wrote about Theodora that "her arts must be veiled in the obscurity of a learned language ", and then went on to quote the passage in Greek with Latin comments!

Procopius tells us in the introduction to The Secret History that he is going to provide explanations and additions that he could not previously reveal for fear of retribution from Justinian and Theodora. Since both before and afterward, Procopius wrote approvingly of the emperor, (keeping in mind that the Secret History was kept secret) it was suggested in the past that he was not the author of the work. Due to expert analyses, it is now generally accepted that Procopius did, indeed, write it. The text shows no contradictions in point of fact between the Secret History and Procopius' other works and the linguistic and grammatical analysis makes this a conclusive opinion.

The Secret History of Procopius is so important to our subject here that I am going to reproduce it in its entirety over the next couple of chapters. And yes, it IS pornographic in parts.

The Secret History Of Procopius
 
From an article published in The Lancet (scientific journal) providing data about the Justinian plague:
What has allowed the analysis of ancient DNA is to show that Procopius , the historian, was not always reliable. In one of his chronicals described his origin and expansion. "It started with the Egyptian city of Pelusium . Was divided and part went to Alexandria and elsewhere in Egypt and elsewhere was their Palestinian neighbors and from there , went through all the earth. " In reconstructing the genome of the plague, Hendrik Poinar from McMaster University says :" you can clarify where first arose and how they traveled from there".
His work clarifies that the origin of the plague was not Africa but Asia. From there it spread to Europe along trade routes such as the Silk Road . In total, there were three waves which turned a small localized outbreak a global pandemic , according to Procopius, killed 100 million people and was about to 'extinguish ' the human beings on the face of the Earth. So it is ironic that it was Justinian who has given a name to the plague , as he survived her".

Summary
Background
Yersinia pestis has caused at least three human plague pandemics. The second (Black Death, 14—17th centuries) and third (19—20th centuries) have been genetically characterised, but there is only a limited understanding of the first pandemic, the Plague of Justinian (6—8th centuries). To address this gap, we sequenced and analysed draft genomes of Y pestis obtained from two individuals who died in the first pandemic.

Methods
Teeth were removed from two individuals (known as A120 and A76) from the early medieval Aschheim-Bajuwarenring cemetery (Aschheim, Bavaria, Germany). We isolated DNA from the teeth using a modified phenol-chloroform method. We screened DNA extracts for the presence of the Y pestis-specific pla gene on the pPCP1 plasmid using primers and standards from an established assay, enriched the DNA, and then sequenced it. We reconstructed draft genomes of the infectious Y pestis strains, compared them with a database of genomes from 131 Y pestis strains from the second and third pandemics, and constructed a maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree.

Findings
Radiocarbon dating of both individuals (A120 to 533 AD [plus or minus 98 years]; A76 to 504 AD [plus or minus 61 years]) places them in the timeframe of the first pandemic. Our phylogeny contains a novel branch (100% bootstrap at all relevant nodes) leading to the two Justinian samples. This branch has no known contemporary representatives, and thus is either extinct or unsampled in wild rodent reservoirs. The Justinian branch is interleaved between two extant groups, 0.ANT1 and 0.ANT2, and is distant from strains associated with the second and third pandemics.
Interpretation
We conclude that the Y pestis lineages that caused the Plague of Justinian and the Black Death 800 years later were independent emergences from rodents into human beings. These results show that rodent species worldwide represent important reservoirs for the repeated emergence of diverse lineages of Y pestis into human populations.
Funding
McMaster University, Northern Arizona University, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Canada Research Chairs Program, US Department of Homeland Security, US National Institutes of Health, Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.


The teeth of two bodies found in a cemetery in Germany have provided the key. Their remains, dating from the approximate dates of the plague, has succeeded to extract small DNA fragments of Yersinia pestis, the plague bacteria. The analysis has allowed to reconstruct the complete genome of the pathogen and its analysis, published in the journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases, shows that the plague of Justinian's what experts call "a dead end". This means that after wreak havoc, the pathogen died and disappeared without a trace. According to the study, the plague caused a variant of the Yersinia pestis that is not related to those of the great medieval Black Death and its nineteenth-century revival.

The full text: http://download.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/laninf/PIIS1473309913703232.pdf?id=eaabXuRiisVxJ5t1kM4ru
 
For an in-depth analysis of the problem of DNA testing and cross contamination read Return of the Black Death: The World's Greatest Serial Killer by Susan Scott and Christopher Duncan from the University of Liverpool. DNA testing is really not ultimate proof, on the contrary, without the historical context, it can be pretty useless and can lead to some dumb conclusions if knowledge is ignored.

Plagues helped bring down entire civilizations, but they were most likely caused by dangerous viral diseases.

More info at: http://www.sott.net/article/228189-New-Light-on-the-Black-Death-The-Viral-and-Cosmic-Connection

:)
 
A background and some archaeological discoveries about Justinian I, by Macedonian archaeologists :)

http://www.mia.mk/Mobile/mk/Home/RenderSingleNews/256?newsID=132821629

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The monument of Justinian I at the square "Macedonia" in Skopje

Justinian_I.jpg


Before the monument of Justinian I (Flavus Petrus Sabatius Justinijanus) at Skopje square in 2011, few people in Macedonia know that the birthplace of the emperor and ruler of the Eastern Roman Empire from 527 to 565 It is the village Taor, Katlanovsko. But if this is unknown to us, it follows a logical question whether information ever reached the ears of our neighbors from surrounding states, let alone the general public in Europe and in the world!

The question is how to present the Macedonian truth to the world experts on the birthplace of Justinian I, when Serbs have been trying to prove that it comes from their areas. Serbian experts have disputed the findings of Macedonian archaeologists to the birthplace of the emperor, claiming that he was born in Caricin city, located 28 km from Leskovac. The information alone would like to hear the Greeks Eastern Roman Empire have implemented as part of their national history. Based on the writings of contemporary and biographer of Justinian, Procopius, and previously well studied professional literature, our archaeologists in 2001 to locate the birthplace of Justinian, and it is the ancient settlement Tauresium or today Katlanovsko village Taor. This site was first recorded by English explorer, archaeologist and traveler Arthur Evans hundred years ago.

Храмот на Пресветата Мудрост (the Temple of the Most Holy Wisdom)

The_Temple_of_the_Most_Holy_Wisdom.jpg


For architect Vangel Bozinovski, it Justinijn or Upravda as states was baptized, from Skopje oblivion. In his book "Contributions to the history of the Macedonian architecture," Bozinovski lists all the merits of Justinian. A fact that Justinian is the creator of most genius architectural construction in the history of mankind-the Temple of the Most Holy Wisdom, according to Bozinovski is most important. Despite so many merits, from Skopje is oblivion, said Bozinovski.

- There is no greater injustice than forgetfulness, especially if you have forgotten own family and nation, and he conveyed the glory of your lineage or profession. Especially if you allow to be alienated from his (and your) flowed. Especially if you allow it appropriates who as reached. History of the Macedonian architecture, although it is still unwritten, boasts that largely does injustice of this type. The greatest injustices in the Macedonian culture happening in architecture. Therefore as a leading discipline in diverse filth of injustice, there should be sought (odlichnik) Macedonian, said Bozinovski.

According to him, the biggest dilemma builder in the Second Macedonian kingdom, as they called Byzantium is (odlichnikot) born 483 years in Taor, near Skopje, baptized as likely Upravda and later translated by the Roman coin (otherwise known as Latin) as Justinian.

- Skopje resident was born to create justice, who was born in the name of justice, it is experiencing the greatest injustice that can and do to a person. Macedonian builders, Macedonian architects, his countrymen, all collectively forgotten and allow you to be alienated and (priroduvan) to other roots, said Bozinovski.

Who is Upravda (Justinian)?

Upravda_Justinian.jpg


Born in Skopje, Тaor in 483 year God-child. His uncle (Justin Bader from a neighboring village) sits on the throne of the Second Macedonian kingdom when Upravda 25 years. As a successful warrior and general was summoned to Constantinople to be educated as a ruler. He studied in Constantinople, Antioch, Nicea, Alexandria. It acquires knowledge of diplomacy, law, economics, theology and architecture. Before becoming king he married actress and dancer Theodora which is unprecedented precedent in the history of the kingdom (Theodora no aristocratic flowed). After sitting on the throne he builds the most powerful period of the existence of the Second Macedonian kingdom creates European law (today renamed as "Roman"), in his time determined the year of birth of the God-child as a zero year and the beginning of a new era build forts from Ravenna to Damascus.

- Only these attributes to his name enough one (odlichnik) never be forgotten by his people, but Upravda there are more substantial and more immediate importance for Macedonians, in 534, he decided to renew the devastated earthquake hometown of Skopje on whose urban matrix currently developing the capital of Macedonia. And another fact which personally I consider to be most important in the case of (najneopravdaniot) Macedonian Upravda, Justinian is the creator of мост гениус architectural construction in the history of mankind-the Temple of the Most Holy Wisdom. It is his architectural design although its implementation involved the construction engineer Isidore of Miletus the mathematician and the theorist - Anatemij of Thrall said Vangel Bozinovski.

According to him, the injustice in itself the possibility of being corrected. Macedonian architects of this causality should be thankful for this opportunity, said Bozinovski.

Association of Architects of Skopje create an annual award "Justinian's Gate" in 1997. Attorneys appointed its faculty by the name of Upravda, using the Latin translation in 2003. Council of Skopje voted responsibility for construction of Justinian I (Upravda) in 2004, and in 2011 this obligation is implemented. But according to Bozinovski can still much to do to be alleviated injustice to (najonepravdaniot) Macedonian in the history of Macedonian architecture, why, he says, who knows how many more have to wait to appear next Upravda, which will be able to be good and just ruler and manage the built-spread ancient sense of right and justice, which are built and develop Macedonian civilization.

Stobi.jpg


Bozinovski in his book "Contributions to the history of the Macedonian architecture" crosses an interesting data that has not yet been confirmed by the experts that Justinian-Upravda may just been baptized in the baptistery in Stobi. There is another thing that is a challenge for archaeologists, and that to find the city Justiniana Prima, which some believe to be under the Old Bazaar (in Skopje). Many need to dig up the past and explores the work of Justinian. But before the world need to hear that the great Justinian comes from Skopje, and was born in Skopje Taor, not in the city Caricin they claimed that Serbs whose "truth" is famous in the world.

*There is no translation to words in the brackets.


Emperor Justinian never forgot his native Taor

http://dnevnik.mk/default.asp?ItemID=9FD1300CF80AD949B1F27FB4C3036C4A

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Taor_iskopini.jpg


Justinian he never forgot his birthplace, though as king had obligations.This claim archaeologists based on a large jar with a royal seal of Justinian, who in 2008 discovered the archeologist Kiro Ristov, indicating that the Roman Emperor helped the population with food.That much it meant birthplace confirmed by the fact that the emperor found Taor with turret.

The power after the death of his uncle Justin

For parents of Justinian little is known. But it does know that his time is closely connected with his uncle Justin I, who was born in the ancient settlement Badarija, today Badar, a village located 4.5 km from Taor in Skopje.Using the position of his cousin,he was still in his early youth went to Konstantinopol,seat of the Eastern Roman Empire. In the capital, Justinian has received the best education, unlike his uncle, who was almost illiterate man...
 
I am finally reading this one (perfect reading for HBOT sessions) and one of the things which I found curious is how he compares Justinian (482-565AD) to Domitian (51-96AD). Domitian was Roman emperor from allegedly year 81-96 AD, whereas Justinian was emperor from allegedly 527-565. A gap of 431 years from when Domitian ended and Justinian began. Procopius lived from approximately 500 to 565AD and was thus a contemporary of Justinian. Procopius must have written it with an audience in mind who would have understood what he was talking about. Had the gap been 1 or 2 generations then it would have sounded plausible but not 4 centuries. Obviously it made me think of the timeline gap of 460 years as mentioned by the C's.

Domitian was the last of the Flavian dynasty and ruled from Rome, whereas Justinian ruled from Constantinople in the Eastern Roman empire.
Here is a little bit of how Procopius describes Justinian and with mention of Domitian. Notice that he is not qualifying Domitian like saying the long ago ruler or the emperor who lived 400+ years ago, but merely as the son of Vespasian (his father and also Roman emperor).

To make a long description short, he much resembled Domitian, Vespasian's son. He was the one whom the Romans so hated that even tearing him into pieces did not satisfy their wrath against him, but a decree was passed by the Senate that the name of this Emperor should never be written, and that no statue of him should be preserved. And so this name was erased in all the inscriptions at Rome and wherever else it had been written, except only where it occurs in the list of emperors; and nowhere may be seen any statue of him in all the Roman Empire, save one in brass, which was made for the following reason.

Domitian's wife was of free birth and otherwise noble; and neither had she herself ever done wrong to anybody, nor had she assented in her husband's acts. Wherefore she was dearly loved; and the Senate sent for her, when Domitian died, and commanded her to ask whatever boon she wished. But she asked only this: to set up in his memory one brass image, wherever she might desire. To this the Senate agreed. Now the lady, wishing to leave a memorial to future time of the savagery of those who had butchered her husband, conceived this plan: collecting the pieces of Domitian's body, she joined them accurately together and sewed the body up again into its original semblance. Taking this to the statue makers, she ordered them to produce the miserable form in brass. So the artisans forthwith made the image, and the wife took it, and set it up in the street which leads to the Capitol, on the right hand side as one goes there from the Forum: a monument to Domitian and a revelation of the manner of his death until this day.

Justinian's entire person, his manner of expression and all of his features might be clearly pointed out in this statue.

Now such was Justinian in appearance; but his character was something I could not fully describe. For he was at once villainous and amenable; as people say colloquially, a moron. He was never truthful with anyone, but always guileful in what he said and did, yet easily hoodwinked by any who wanted to deceive him. His nature was an unnatural mixture of folly and wickedness. What in olden times a peripatetic philosopher said was also true of him, that opposite qualities combine in a man as in the mixing of colors. I will try to portray him, however, insofar as I can fathom his complexity.

This Emperor, then, was deceitful, devious, false, hypocritical, two-faced, cruel, skilled in dissembling his thought, never moved to tears by either joy or pain, though he could summon them artfully at will when the occasion demanded, a liar always, not only offhand, but in writing, and when he swore sacred oaths to his subjects in their very hearing. Then he would immediately break his agreements and pledges, like the vilest of slaves, whom indeed only the fear of torture drives to confess their perjury. A faithless friend, he was a treacherous enemy, insane for murder and plunder, quarrelsome and revolutionary, easily led to anything evil, but never willing to listen to good counsel, quick to plan mischief and carry it out, but finding even the hearing of anything good distasteful to his ears.

How could anyone put Justinian's ways into words? These and many even worse vices were disclosed in him as in no other mortal nature seemed to have taken the wickedness of all other men combined and planted it in this man's soul. And besides this, he was too prone to listen to accusations; and too quick to punish. For he decided such cases without full examination, naming the punishment when he had heard only the accuser s side of the matter. Without hesitation he wrote decrees for the plundering of countries, sacking of cities, and slavery of whole nations, for no cause whatever. So that if one wished to take all the calamities which had befallen the Romans before this time and weigh them against his crimes, I think it would be found that more men had been murdered by this single man than in all previous history.
Sounds like a classic psychopath. How truthful the account given by Procopius is, is of course a question and also what motives he had himself in writing it the way he did. The period sounds though much closer to the time of the Flavian dynasty and the total moral collapse described of those times.

There are also many similarities to our present day situation, where what is described in the book is even more relatable than it was when Laura posted it in 2003, 20 years ago. The slide towards the abyss has dramatically picked up speed.
 
I am finally reading this one (perfect reading for HBOT sessions) and one of the things which I found curious is how he compares Justinian (482-565AD) to Domitian (51-96AD). Domitian was Roman emperor from allegedly year 81-96 AD, whereas Justinian was emperor from allegedly 527-565. A gap of 431 years from when Domitian ended and Justinian began. Procopius lived from approximately 500 to 565AD and was thus a contemporary of Justinian. Procopius must have written it with an audience in mind who would have understood what he was talking about. Had the gap been 1 or 2 generations then it would have sounded plausible but not 4 centuries. Obviously it made me think of the timeline gap of 460 years as mentioned by the C's.

Domitian was the last of the Flavian dynasty and ruled from Rome, whereas Justinian ruled from Constantinople in the Eastern Roman empire.
Now that you mention it, it IS rather curious. I mean, would anybody nowadays compare a contemporary to someone who lived 400 years ago?

Well, I have noticed that some people make comparisons between the Democrats or George Soros and King George III, i.e., the one who lost the colonies with his high handed behavior. That's about 250 years ago. But I think that is stretching it. More often, people make comparisons to Stalin or Hitler or someone within the last 100 years or so.

The question would be, of course, what to cut out of the "standard history", parts of which were obviously made up, to bring the two periods closer together.

The bio on wikipedia gives conflicting accounts of Domitian.
 
Well, I have noticed that some people make comparisons between the Democrats or George Soros and King George III, i.e., the one who lost the colonies with his high handed behavior. That's about 250 years ago. But I think that is stretching it. More often, people make comparisons to Stalin or Hitler or someone within the last 100 years or so.
I think that makes more sense for a culture like the U.S., but maybe not for one with a longer history. For example, in Russia it would be like making a comparison to Ivan the Terrible (1547-1584) or False Dmitri from the Time of Troubles.
 
I think that makes more sense for a culture like the U.S., but maybe not for one with a longer history. For example, in Russia it would be like making a comparison to Ivan the Terrible (1547-1584) or False Dmitri from the Time of Troubles.

True. Perhaps Western hemisphere thought is truncated by the shortness of its history.
 
I think that makes more sense for a culture like the U.S., but maybe not for one with a longer history. For example, in Russia it would be like making a comparison to Ivan the Terrible (1547-1584) or False Dmitri from the Time of Troubles.
That is a point, yet between Domitian and Justinian, there were allegedly about 94 emperors (by a loose count) and in very turbulent times too. In comparison Russia had about 26 rulers between Ivan the Terrible and 1917.
So one thing is for keeping track of 94 emperors and a second thing is to transmit this historical knowledge in uncertain times to the general population so that the audience of Procopius' writings would understand it straight away without any qualifiers about Domitian. What strikes me as odd is how Justinian could rule for this long ruining everybody, from all the patricians, soldiers, merchants, bureaucrats to the general populace and even foreign rulers, without any revolts, coups or opposition. According to Procopius, he was even easy to con it makes it hard to think that he ruled for 32+ years. Any ruler needs a power base, but he didn't have any. Even the Palace guards he cheated. I suspect his reign was much shorter and also that much of what Procopius ascribes as due to Justinian was due to earth changes/plague, famine etc. Justinian ruled right through that tumultuous time period of plagues etc.
The question would be, of course, what to cut out of the "standard history", parts of which were obviously made up, to bring the two periods closer together.
Yes that is the difficult question, to decipher what and when things were invented/copy/pasted in to fluff up history.
 
I think that makes more sense for a culture like the U.S., but maybe not for one with a longer history. For example, in Russia it would be like making a comparison to Ivan the Terrible (1547-1584) or False Dmitri from the Time of Troubles.
I just looked at the Danish king/queen list and if we go back 460 years there has only been 17 monarchs including the current queen of Denmark. Even there, it is hard to remember or distinguish one from the other and Danes today would be very hard pressed to tell one from the other despite being a culture with a longer history as like the US.
 
I just looked at the Danish king/queen list and if we go back 460 years there has only been 17 monarchs including the current queen of Denmark. Even there, it is hard to remember or distinguish one from the other and Danes today would be very hard pressed to tell one from the other despite being a culture with a longer history as like the US.
In the case of Rome, I think their elites were probably much more history-centered. Just look at late Republican-era Rome, when you would still see references to the 500-year-old monarchy era and the long legacy of early consular families (e.g. Brutus).
So one thing is for keeping track of 94 emperors and a second thing is to transmit this historical knowledge in uncertain times to the general population so that the audience of Procopius' writings would understand it straight away without any qualifiers about Domitian.
I'm not that familiar with Procopius's book, but it sounds strange to me that his audience would be the general population. Most writings of the sort were for other elites. Was Procopius different in some way?
What strikes me as odd is how Justinian could rule for this long ruining everybody, from all the patricians, soldiers, merchants, bureaucrats to the general populace and even foreign rulers, without any revolts, coups or opposition.
I'm reading Turchin's "War and Peace and War" about secular cycles and empires right now (very cool book, BTW!). He points out a couple things that might be relevant here. Not sure. First, according to the official history, Justinian reigned over some significant expansions of the empire. Typically in empires, foreign conquests of this sort have the effect of mitigating a lot of local instabilities. It would be harder for elite factions to gain support for successful coups. Second, the plague came right at an overpopulation peak (as plagues often do). So up until that point, structural-demographic conditions hadn't yet approached the disintegrative phase when coups and civil wars are more likely to be successful. (Also, there was one revolt I found, though it was early in his career: Nika riots - Wikipedia)

Of course, all that assumes much of the official history, so it can't be taken to the bank, necessarily. Just some things to consider while hypothesizing.
 
I am finally reading this one (perfect reading for HBOT sessions) and one of the things which I found curious is how he compares Justinian (482-565AD) to Domitian (51-96AD). Domitian was Roman emperor from allegedly year 81-96 AD, whereas Justinian was emperor from allegedly 527-565. A gap of 431 years from when Domitian ended and Justinian began. Procopius lived from approximately 500 to 565AD and was thus a contemporary of Justinian. Procopius must have written it with an audience in mind who would have understood what he was talking about. Had the gap been 1 or 2 generations then it would have sounded plausible but not 4 centuries. Obviously it made me think of the timeline gap of 460 years as mentioned by the C's.
Great observation, Aeneas! This could be an important puzzle piece.

That is a point, yet between Domitian and Justinian, there were allegedly about 94 emperors (by a loose count) and in very turbulent times too. In comparison Russia had about 26 rulers between Ivan the Terrible and 1917.
This is what I was thinking as well. Ivan the Terrible is one of those few prototypical 'villain leaders' in Russian history, too, so would no doubt be a more readily-accessible 'go-to' for the public consciousness, even alongside recent examples like Lenin, Stalin etc. Unfortunately, it seems the Romans had no shortage of those types to choose from, and Caligula and Nero were quite close temporally-speaking to Domitian, so Procopius' choice does seem quite curious. He apparently spent a great deal of his career outside of Rome with Belisarius documenting a lot of military activity, too, so presumably there would have also been more recent Byzantium-based rulers to choose from as well - assuming the post-Flavian to Byzantine emperor sequence isn't at least partially fabricated.

I'm not that familiar with Procopius's book, but it sounds strange to me that his audience would be the general population. Most writings of the sort were for other elites. Was Procopius different in some way?
From what I remember regarding this, Procopius' book was unpublished at the time, and a 'clandestine' volume compared to the main body of his work, which was much more laudatory and apologetic of Justinian's regime (no doubt for reasons of personal safety!) So perhaps he wrote it with a limited audience in mind, and yet with the hope that limited audience could preserve it for the historical record so there could be at least some sort of justice in the truth being known. In that sense, it strikes me a bit like "Political Ponerology". Wouldn't surprise me if Procopius wrote the volume with one eye over his shoulder checking for the Praetorian Guard!
 
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