The historie of Leonard Aretine, concerning the warres betwene the Imperialles and the Gothes for the possession of Italy, a worke very pleasant and profitable.
Translated out of Latin into Englishe by Arthur Goldyng.
PRINTED AT LONdon by Rouland Hall, for George Bucke. 1563.
To the ryghte honorable Sir William Sici [...] Knighte principall Secretarie to the Queenes Maiestie and Maister of her hyghnesse Court of wardes and liueries, Arthur Golding wisheth continuance of health, with [...] of honour.
LIke as vines to the entent the bet ter to prosper and preserue their fruit to the vse & pleasure of man, require the staye of trees that bee stronger then themselues: Euen so it behoueth them that mynde to put forth any worke to the behoof [...] and commoditie of others, to shroude themselues vnder the fauour of some suche person, for [Page] whose sake their doing may be the better liked and accepted of all men.
The whiche thyng thys my rude and vnpolished translation of the historye of Leonard Aretine right well perceauyng, at such tyme as being fully finished & ended it was nowe readie to set fote out of dores and to commit it selfe to the wyde world, beholding it self spoyled of hys Romayne garment and turned into a playne Englyshe cote, beganne to be somwhat abasshed and to loke about hym for some fauourable patrone vn der whose protection it myght aduenture to goe abrode. But to whō rather ought it to present it selfe then to hym vnder [Page] whose roofe it hath beene harbroughed and fostered frō the infancie, vntyll suche tyme as it came to his full grouth. And therefore although the wante of fyne pennyng and eloquent indityng of the hystorye in our language, enforce me to confesse it vnworthye to trouble your honour beyng otherwyse busyed in moste weyghtye affayres of thys Realme: ye [...] not wythstandyng partly in cō syderation of my dutye, but more vppon confydence of your clemencye, I haue taken boldnesse to dedicate the same vnto you: so muche the rather, in asmuche as the worke entrea teth of serious and weyghtye matters.
[Page]Wherein if it mai please your ho nour so to accepte my doing, as that this my symple Translati on maye vnder your fauourable protectiō be bold to shewe it self abrode, I shall not only thinke my trauell abundauntly recompenced, but also accompt it for a further encou [...]agemente, to geue the aduenture vpon some greater matter hereafter. Finished at your house in y • Str [...]nd the second of Aprill. 1563.
The preface of Leonard Aretine, vnto hys bookes of the warres in Italye againste the Gothes.
ALthoughe it had bene a far greater pleasure to me, to haue wrytten of the prosperous & [...] estate of Italy, then of the slaughte [...]s and destruction of it: yet notwythstanding forasmuch as the time requireth otherwyse, we also wil chaunge wyth the tyme & follow the mutabilitie of fortune reportinge in these bookes the inuasions of the Gothes, & the warres through the which almost all Italy was brought to [Page] vtter ruine & destruction. Sure ly a sorrowfull matter, but yet for the knowledge of thinges done in those dayes, necessarie to be entreated of. For I cannot thinke but that when Xenophon of Athens that excellēt Clerke, dyd wryte of the beseging and fainishing of Athens and of the throwing downe of the walles of it, he was sorie in his harte that he had o [...]you so to doe. And yet he wrate it, bycause hethought it expediēt that the [...] of [...]h things shuld not perishe. Neyther doth our Liuy deferue les praise when he rehe [...]th y • taking and burning of Rome by the Frenchine [...], then when he setteth out y • famous triumph of Paulus Emylius ouer the [Page] Macedones, or the noble conquestes of Scipio Affricanus. For it is the dutie of an historie to put in writing all aduētures as well vnfortunate as fortunate. And therfore a man maye wyshe y • best, but he must write be it good or bad as occasiō offereth. I assure you as I was inditinge these matters, albeit many things did greue me, for thentier loue y • I beare to my natiue countrye, yetnot wythstandyng thys reason I had to comfort me, y • although Italy suffered at y • time most extreme miseries. yet at the length she not onely gate thupper hand & e [...]pulsed those forreine nations but also hath remayned from y • day to this most welthy & puissant both by sea and land, and [Page] that from that tyme forth her Cities haue florished in ryches & aucthorie most abundantly, and doe florishe still at this hower, thonour and dominion of thē now stre [...]ing it self far of on al sides, so that the thinges that haue happened vnto her, seme not so much to be lamented as to be reioyced at, like vnto Hercules whose greate exploits made him more famous then euer he should haue be [...]e yf he had [...] those daungerous enterprises. I wil not speake of the great [...] litie, good Nurtute, [...] sye, & trad of all Liberall arts & lear [...]ing, of y • which Italy [...] weth it self to be a natural [...] ther & a very nourice, for I will let y • comendations of her alon vntil another tyme. As concerning [Page] y e wa [...]es y • we now must entreate of, there remained [...] mention of thē among y e Latin writers onely there went a report frō man to mā & that very slēder & ob [...], y • Belisarius & Narses captains of y e emperour Iustinian draue y • Gothes out of Italy, but where or in what sort, or by what meanes, there was no [...]nkling at al left in wri ting. We came by y • knowledge of thē out of y • [...]ek Chroncles. Wherfore as I had don by many other thinges before, so also I endeuored to bring agayn to light these things [...] wellny blurred & blotted out of memory. And y • so much y e rather, bycause y • other stories for y • most part do concern thaffaires & do ings of st [...]s, but this [...]cer [...]th wholy our own matters. [Page] Wherein it maye be worthe a mans labour to search & peruse y • state of Italye in those daies what Cities, and what kind of people were in it what townes and cities were beseged, which were wonne and brought in subiectio, & in what places battells were fought. For to know all these thynges it is a great prayse, and not to know thē it is a foule shame. For it is a tokē that a man loueth his country, not to be ignoraunt in thoriginall and procedings therof, or whatsoeuer ells hath fortuned vnto it in tymes past. Furthermore y • knowledge of Histories doth greatly delight the mynd [...]ycause all we men doe of nature couit to know things, and also it bringeth great profit for [Page] as much as it containeth y • examples of like affaires to what end they came, & gyueth experi ens in many thyngs, through the which old men are accompted wiser then yongmē, bicause they haue sene [...]o thynges in their liues time, and by experiens not only of their own but also of other mens perilles, are made more ware, and therfore are able to giue better iudgmēt and are wont to be led by better counsel. For whē they rede of the rich [...]s and Empires of y • greatest kyngs and y • puissantest nations and percayue how sone they com to decay, they vn derstand by & by what a folly it is to boast & be prowd for those things, whych no man is able to assure himself that they shall [Page] cōtinue with him vntill night. Thus doth an Historye make vs bothe more wyse and more modest in our dooinges. And therfore ryght reuerend father I determined to dedicate these Bookes vnto you, as well to thentent you might vnderstād my entier loue and affection to wardes you, as also that you myghte be as a Iudge of my worke and trauel, the which I shal thinke very well bestowed if so wyse and wel learned a mā as you are, doe allow them and take them in good worthe. Whereuppon I wyll take occasion to goe in hand with the processe of myne Historye. Farrewell.
The fyrst Booke of Leonard Aretine, concernyng the warres in Italy against the Gothes.
❧ The first Chapter.
¶ The dispotition of Agustulus, the diuision of the landes through Italy, the cause of the commyng of the Gothes thither, and of their encoun [...]er with Odoacers Captaines.
IN the tyme that Zeno was Emperour of Rome, the Gothes vnder the leading of Theodorich, determined to inuade Italy, lately before soore afflicted with diuers rodes and inuasions of barbarous people, and at that tyme oppressed with the tyranny of Odoacer: of the which thinges I purpose to entreate, repeatyng somewhat deper the state of those tymes, to the intent it may be knowen [Page] from whence the Gothes first came, and what hope moued them to inuade the Empyre.
After the death of the yonger Ualentinian, The d [...]th of Valentinian. who (as it is well ynough knowen) was [...]ayne at Rome of hys owne Subiectes, the Empyre of the West beganne to wauer, and to bée as it were without lyfe or soule.
Nowe, there were at the same tyme in Italy, great armyes of forreyners raysed latelye before by Ualentinian for feare of Attila, and afterwardes associated by the Romaynes agaynst the Uandales. These forreyners perceyuynge the empoueryshemente and weakenesse of the Empyre, and therevppon takynge courage, conspired together, and demaunded to haue the thyrde parte of the landes through all Italye deuyded amonge them.
The name of the Empyre remayn̄ed at that tyme in one Augustnlus, who beynge but a verye [...]ylde, was g [...]uerned by hys father Orestes a [Page 2] Senatour of Rome. Therefore at suche tyme as the menne of warre demaunded a partition of the landes, and that Orestes beynge a wyse and sage personne wythstoode theyr request, the Souldyours [...]ewe hym, and fourthewyth folowynge theyr Captayne Odoacer, camme to Rome Augustulus [...] deposed and Odoacer [...] peth. and deposed Augustulus. By meanes whereof hauynge nowe the lawe in theyr owne hande, they deuyded the thyrde part of the landes among them Odoacer hauynge by thys meanes gotten the Soueraygnytye, in hys owne name and in the name of the armye ruled the Cytyes at hys owne luste and pleasure.
Zeno also Gouernour of the East Empyre lying at Constantynople, beganne to dread soore the power of The cause of the commy [...] of the Gothes into Italy. Theodorich. For the Gothes that inhabited the vpper coaste of Thracia, hadde alreadye begonne to vere and disquiett the Countreys borderynge vppon them.
[Page]And it was none other lyke, but that they woulde make some insurrection against the Romain Empyre. Whervppon to the entent to delyuer hymself and the countreys there aboutes from feare of the Gothes. He persuaded Theodorich to passe into Italy, and to delyuer the cities there oute of the hands of the wrongfull withholders of them. Induced with these persuation Theordorich remouyng out of Thrace, and leadyng with him the Gothes with their wyues and children and al that euer they had through Syrmium and Illyricum, went toward Italy: where at hys fyrst entraunce, the Captaines of Odoacer camme against him with their armies. The first battell betwirt them was fought not farre from the Citie of Aquileia, vppon the riuer Fontius. In the which conflict after a long and sharpe encoū ter, the Gothes gate the victorye, and putte the [...] of Odoacer to flyght.
❧ The. ij Chapter.
¶ Theodorich kyng of the Gothes besiegeth Odoacer in Rauenna, the matter is ended by composition, [...] of them lyeth in wayre to destroye other, Theodorich preuenting Odoacer kylleth hym at a banquet, by meanes whereof he obteyneth the soueraignitie of Italy, of the actes of Theodorich and of hys death.
AFter this, when the Gothes had wonne the cities there aboutes, Odoacer is besieged. and vanquysshed the power of their enemyes in other places also, at length they besieged Odoacer in the Citie of Rauenna. The siege held the Gothes tack lenger then thei thought it woulde haue done at the firste, and that happened by reason of the situation of the place. For neyther can Rauenna bee easlye besieged vppon that syde that is towarde the sea, because it standeth hard vppon the shore, neither vppon that syde that is towarde the land, because it hath a diche cut from the riuer Po, and is enuyroned wyth [Page] certaine standyng waters and marisses. By meanes whereof, the Gothes laye well nye full thrée yeres at the siege thereof and could not wynne it.
But yet in the meane season, thei won all the townes nere aboute, sauynge Cesena, the which also was kept with a stronge garrison of Odoacers.
At the last as well the Assaylaunts as the Defendauntes beinge weryed, the Composition, betwene Odo acer and Theodorich. matter was decided by composition, that Theodorich and Odoacer should be Comperes and Felowes in Empyre. After that thynges were thus set at a staye, Theodorich and hys Gothes entered into Rauenna, neyther was there any parte of all Italy that was not content to receyue hym.
But thys copertnershyppe in the Empyre lasted not longe. For when as the one bare grudge in hys heart preuelye agaynst the other, Theodorich preuentyng Odoacer badde hym to a Banquet and there kylled hym, and The death. of Odoacer. so with h [...]s Gothes [...]are all the [...] [Page 4] alone in Italy. Howe be it, to saye the trueth, hys gouernement was not verye intollerable, albeit he reteyned for hys people y e thyrde part of the lands, in suche sort as Odoacer had lately before deuyded them. For he suffered The raygne and actes of Theodorich. the cities to bée gouerned by their own lawes and by theyr owne citizins.
Appoyntyng Rauenna to bée the Sea of hys kyngdome, where he also planted hym selfe. Thyrtye and seuen yeres raygned Theodorich in Italye: neyther sate he styll Idellye lyke a cowarde all the whyle. For he bothe annexed Sicill wyth all the Ilelandes about it vnto hys kyngdome, and also subdued Dalmatia. Moreouer, duryng the sayde tym [...] of hys raygne, he led an huge hoste ouer the Alpes and the ryuer Rhone into Fraunce agaynste the Frenche men.
Thus dyd thys Kynge manye noble [...], and hys name was famous and [...], sauynge that in hys latter dayes, he was noted of [Page] [...]rucltye and outrage, for puttyng to death of Symmachus and Boetius Symmachus. [...]tius. Senatours of the citie of Rome, with certain other noble men, onely vppon suspition that they sought to set the citie at libertic.
❧ The. iij. Chapter.
¶ Amulusuentha the doughter of Theodorich with her sonne Athalaricke succede in the kingdome, the seueritie of the Quene in executing of iustice, the wilfulnesse of the Gothes in the education of theyr kyng, the vntimely death of the said Arhalarick the great fr [...]dship of the Quene toward Theodatus, & the ingratitude of him towards her agayn, themperour Iust [...]an sendeth Belisarius against the Gothes, and he con [...]uereth all Sicill.
THeodorich being deceased with out issue male, his doughter Amulusuentha, as then a Widow, with her sonne Athalaricke succeded in the kyngdome. This Athalaricke [Page 5] was but a chyld to speake of, and therefore all the whole care of the gouernment lay in the Queenes necke. Who hauyng great regard of her infant, An example of the good education of a Prince. immediatly dyd put hym forth to be broughte vp in learnynge and good nurture. For she gaue hym learned men to be his teachers, and appoynted certaine Lordes of the Gothes, men auncient, of great grauitie and good bringyng vp to be continually aboute hym. And she her selfe looked verye straightlye to the gouernement of the Empyre, prohibiting the Gothes as well to do wronge as to take wronge, and also repealyng diuers actes of her Iustice and clemencie in a woman. father Theodorich, reducyng them to a moore gentlenesse and clementie.
Amongest the whiche this was one, that she restored to the sonnes of Boetius and Symmachus their fathers goods and inheritaunce, which Theodorich had lately before confiscate: affirming that they were wrongfully con dempned through false accusations, [Page] whereto the kyng vnaduisedly had geuen lyght credit. Furthermore, she compelled her cosyn germaine Theodatus Iustice without parcialiti [...] (who hauyng great possessions in Thuscane had tak [...]n many fermes and maners violently from hys neighbours lyke a tyrant) to make restituition of the harmes he had done, with a sharpe rebuke for hys great misbehauiour. This seueriti [...] of the Queene, made many of the Gothes to become her enemyes. And therefore, certayne of the chief of them conspiring together, determined to bring vp her sonne contrary to her disposition, ma [...] gre her power. Wherevpon thei came vnto her saying, it lyked not the Gothes that their kynge shoulde lyue in subiection vnder tutors and teachers, or that he should be kept in awe of his elders, they sayd it was meete for a Kyng of such pusaunce as he should be to set hys mynde vppon cheualrye and feates of armes, and to exercise hyms [...]f among lus [...]y yong gentlemen, rather [Page 6] than to learne to way [...]e vppon a maister, or to sit glummyng amonge a sort of old Dotards. For by this meanes both the body & the mynde of their Kyng shoulde bee effeminated: But through thother he should encrease as well in strength and courage, as also in conning and experience. For he was not made kyng to thentent to instruct his people in learnyng, but to enlarge his dominion by knighthod & cheualry. The Queene albeit she were not igno raūt to what end & purpose al this drift was driuen, yet not withstanding because she would not seme to be vtterly against their requests, she cōdescended vnto thē. The yong prince being deliuered to the cōpany of as youthfull as Licentious liberty corruption of youth himself, w tin a litle while after, fell to a more lasciuius trade of liuing folowīg altogether y • lust of y e flesh, & such other kinds of filthy pleasures. And against his mother he became so stoberne & self willed through th [...]nticement of ill coū sell that he disdeined to go vnto her or speake to her.
[Page]The Queene when she saw her self by such pollicies assaulted of her aduersary Euill counsell the confusion of counsellers and bere [...]t of her kyngdome, being a woman of a stout courage, could no lenger beare with their doynges, but sent certaine of her officers priuely, and put to death thrée of the ch [...] of the Gothes, whiche were the ryngleaders and counsaylers of her sonne vnto all noughtinesse. And so hauyng reconciled hym vnto her, she tooke vpp [...]n her the gouernement again. But Athalaricke beyng fallen into diuers The death of Athalarick [...]. surffetts and diseases through the disorder of hys former lasciuious lyuyng, deceased in the. [...]. yere of hys age, when he had raigned with his mother x. yeres after the death of Theodorich. The Queene after the decease of her sōne, thinking that she shuld be the bet ter able to wade through w t the weightye affayres of the realme, yf so be she had some partaker & assistent, tooke her cousin Theodatus (of whome I made Theodotus is made kyng. mencion before) to be her pertner in [Page 7] the kyngdome. Thys Theodatus was excellently well learned both in Latyne and in Greke, and had geuen himself much to the readyng of Plato and other philosophie. Neuerthelesse, beyng of nature féeble and vnconstant An example of excedyng ingratitudo. he was distayned wyth many vices.
Through whych where as the quéene of her mere bountie & good wyll, had raysed hym from a subiect to the state of a kynge, he forthwyth requited her with the greatest ingratitude and trea cherie that could be. For he conspired secretly with her enemyes, and tooke and sent her as a banyshed persone, into the Ilelande in the lake of [...]. And ere it was long after, he suffered her to be kylled by the kynsfolke and chyldren of them, whome she had put to death in the tyme of the obstinat rebellion of her sonne agaynst her. This so great vntrueth and treacherye of Theodatus, dyd greatly disquiet many of the Gothes, lamenting the vnworthy mischaunce of the Queene, & [Page] to see the posteritie of Theodorich so wickedly destroyed, in so much that it wanted but litle, but that the Gothes had made insurrection against him.
Whereof as soone as [...]he Emperour The cause of the warres be twene the Emperour & the Gothes. Iustinian had intelligence (for after Zeno, Anastasius, & Iustine, the Empyre descended vnto him) thinking that the tyme now scrued to set Italy at libertie, he applied all his whole mynde and study how to compasse and bring the same to effect. Herevnto his prospe rous successe since he was Emperour prouoked him: in as much as lately before by his captain Belisarius, he had [...]anquished the Uandales and wrested Affrick out of their hands. And therefore h [...] thoug [...]t it was not to be abidden, that (contrary to the honour of the Romain Empyre) Italy shuld be held in subiection by the barbarous. Induced The effect of themperours ambassade vn to Theodatus with these reasons, he sent Ambassadours to Theodatus, requiring him to surrender vp Italy & Sicill, in recō pence whereof he profered him other [Page 8] dignities & promotiōs: the which offer yf he refused, then he denounced open war against him. Upon the refusall of these offers made by Theodatus, the Emperour entending to make no further Belisarius is appovnted in to Italy and [...] into Dal [...]. delay, cōmaunded Belisarius to passe into Italy with his army. Howebeit whiles he was making preparatiō he pretēded as though he would haue sent his nauy into Affricke, & not into Sicill. About the same time also he cō maunded another of his captaines called Mundus to inuade Dalmatia with another power: to the entent that the Gothes beyng assayled on all sides at once, might the easlyer be oppressed.
Mūdus entering into Dalmatia won Salons & set al the countrey on an vprore. Belisarius hauing rigged hys shippes & embarked hys Souldyours, Beli [...] [...] into [...] and of his do ing there. sayled toward Sicill. He had of footemen a sufficient number, all tall men and pyked Souldiours, and his Horsemen were conueyed wyth him by water also.
[Page]Captaines of his footemen were Con stantine, Bessas, and Herodian: captaines of his horsemen were Ualentine, Innocent and Magnus: and lieutenaunt generall and soueraigne of them all was Belisarius. Who folowyng the commaundment of the emperour hys maister whereas he pretended to sayle towarde Cartharge, ariued by the way in Sicill, and there A politique Captine. goyng a land as it had bene to refreshe hym selfe and hys souldyours, when he espied tyme and occasion for hys purpose, sodenly [...] he assayled the citie Catina and wonne it. Then shewyng hym self with hys army abrode, and disclosing hys prepensed purpose, within few dayes after, he receyued Now called Saragoza Syracuse by composition. After this it is a wonder to sée how victory ranne on hys syde, and how the Cities of theyr owne accord yelded and called him to them. The cause herof was the hatred that the Sicilians bare to the Gothes, and the authoritie of the [Page 9] Empyre of Rome, together with the presence of Belisarius. Whome (for as much as he had delyuered A [...]ricke from the Uandalians) they hoped should do the lyke by the Gothes thorough Sicil & Italy. Moreouer, the Go thes had made no preparation in Sicil, because they looked not for any warre there. By meanes whereof it came to passe, that as many of the Gothes as were in Sicill, beyng amazed at the sodain inuasion of Belisarius, and the hasty reuoltyng of the cities, thought more of runnyng awaye then of makyng resistence. Only the citie of Now called Palerno. Panormus (by reason there was a strong garrison of the Gothes in it) abode the The siege of Panormus & the [...]ynnyng thereof. siege, and endured it to the vttermost. The which citie beyng very defensible and well forti [...]ed toward the land, and therevppon settyng lyght by any thing that thenemie could worke agaynst it, at the last by a nauye sent into the hauen was wonne by the sea. For the hauen [...] hard to the walles of the [Page] [...] [Page 9] [...] [Page] towne: And Belisarius had marked howe that in diuers places, the toppes of the mastes reached a great hight aboue the walles of the citie. Wherefore he set Archers and [...]yngers in the topeastles of the shyppes, who with arrowes and darts dyd so beate their ene mies vnderneath them on all sydes, that the walles were left naked without defendaunts: so that theyr companye went without daunger to the foote of the wall, and brake it downe. Thorough The good suc cesse of Belisariu [...]. which distresse theyr enemyes beynge discomforted, yelded vp the towne. This was the last Citie of all Sicill that came in subiection. When Belisarius had recouered Panormus he retourned to Syracuse, and there makyng sumptuous and royall pageants, threwe Golde and Syluer amonge the poople. For it was the laste daye of hys Consulshyppe the whyche was geuen hym in honour of the victorye that he gate of the Uandalians. And Fortune was so fauourable vnto [Page 10] hym, that besydes all hys form [...] victories, euen the verye laste daye of hys Consulshyppe she closed vp wyth the recouerye of all Sicill. Thus went the world in Sicill.
❧ The. iiij. Chapter.
¶Of the doynges of Mundus in Dalmatia agaynst the Gothes, of the death of the sayde Mundus and hys sonne Maurice, and howe on [...] G [...]ppa a noble man of the Gothes recouereth all that Mundus had conquered before.
IN Dalmatia both partes raysed greate powers and [...] towardes The doing [...] of Mundus [...] Dalmatia. the Citie of Salons. Nowe when they were comme neare vnto the town, and that the warre was whote on bothe partes, at length there was a battell fought, not prepurposed but by chaunce vpon the sodaine without knowledge before of any of both partes. The cause thereof was this. [Page] The captaine Mundus had a sonne cal led Maurice a goodly yong gentleman and a tall man of his handes. Who hauyng the leadyng of a troope of Horsemen, rode to view the Campe of the Gothes. Now by chaunce the Gothish horsemen met with him, and assoone as the one parte had espied the other, there was no tarience but straight to the skirmishe. So thei encountred for a tyme very fiersly, and many of the stou test of the Gothes were slaine, and at the last Maurice also was kylled.
Both the Campes hearyng of the skirmishe, made spede to rescow their com Sodaine battell betwene the [...]thes & the [...] [...]. Whyles that Mundus was on hi [...] [...], [...]dings was brought him of the losse of his sonne. Then the man beyng of nature fierce & warlyke, ran in a rage lyke a mad man vppon his enemies. By that time was al the hoste of the Gothes come thither, and the encounter was with the whole power o [...] [...]yther part, the battell was very bloo [...] and cruell. At length the Gothes [Page 11] being discomfited with great slaughter and losse of their people were put to flight. But Mundus whiles he vnsaciably followed the slaughter of the Se thende of [...] furye. Gothes, and for angre and sorowe of the losse of his sonne pursued the chace to farre, was recountered of his dispersed enemies and slain: and so the father through the outragious reuengement of his sonne, in thend did seeke his own confusion. After this battell both armies departed a sundre. For the Gothes being vanquished durst not abide in those quarters, and the Emperours souldiours being dismayed with the losse of theyr Captain, left Salons and retyred backe agayne. I thinke it not good to suppress with filens a thing that many authours haue made menciō of. They say there were certaine old verses of Sibill in the which it was prophesied, that when Affricke should be A prophesie of Sybill. recouered by the Romains, then shuld Mundus (which word as it is here a mans name: so also it signifieth the [Page] worlde) and hys yssue shoulde peryshe. This prophesie of Sybill made many men affrayed, doutyng least heauen and earthe with all mankynd shoulde vtterly haue decayed. But after the time that Affrick in the former warres was recouered by the pussaūce of Belisarius, then it appeared howe that S [...]ill prophesied of the destruction of this Captaine and his sonne. So depely are all prophesies wrapped in doutfull circumstaunces. After the death of this Captaine and the departure of his army, the Gothes beganne to growe the stronger in those parts. For Grippa one of the noble men of the Gothes, The Gothes recouer all that Mundus had cōquered imediatly thervppon raising a new power recouered. Salons & all that euer Mūdus had gottē before [...] those places. In so much that the Gothes were farre of greater power then their enemies in those borders. And therwithall Theodatus the king taking stoutly vpō him thought himself able to match or rather to ouercome themperour in battell.
❧ The. v. Chapter.
¶The Emperour sendeth a new Lieutenaunt into Dalmatia, named Constantian, who recouereth all Dalmatia and Lyburnia.
WHEN Iustinian heard of the thynges that were done in Dalmatia, he made one of his Courtyers Constantian made lieutenant of Dalmatia. named Constantian Lieutenant of the warres there. And therewythall wrote to Belisarius that he should withoute further delaye passe into Italy. Constantian therefore hauyng repayred hys armye and throughlye furnyshed hys nauye of all thynges, after that he hadde taryed a whyle aboute the doynge thereof at Dyrrachin̄, remoued from thence and sayled to Khagusium. There were at Khagusium certayne skowtwatches set there by Gryppa, who seing y • nauy of Cōstantian passing along the shoreside, beautifull to beholde bothe for the [Page] buylding and number of the shippes, by and by retourned vnto Grippa, and where as y e thing was great of it self, they reported it to be far greater then The sodaine feare of Grippa at the arriuall of Constantian. it was in dede. At the which tidinges Grippa was at his witts end and wist not in the worlde what to do. For he thought it both perilous and also great folly to encounter against so great a power: and to enclose him self within Salons he durst not, because he had the Citizins more then half in a gelousie of treason, & the walles of the town were in diuers places decayed & fallen downe for lacke of reparation. Moreouer, considering that his enemies were to strong for him on y e sea, he was afrayed he should soone be brought to scarcetie of victualls. Beyng distressed with these cares, at length (which is Counsell the refuge of cares the refuge in such extremities) he fell to counsell. According to the same he conueyghed all hys hoost a good waye out of Salons, and encamped in a place conuenient. In the meane tyme [Page 13] Constantian arriued with all his [...]ete at Lysne, there hauyng intelligence what was done, he sayled to the next shore, and there setting his men a land sent CCCCC of them before, to take the streight & narrowe passages in the night season, which are within a lytle way of Salons. The which thing being executed, he him self the next mornyng brought all his army to the citie, Constantian getteth Dalmatia and Lyburnia. and without any trouble recouered the same. When Grippa had vnderstanding therof, he taried not past two or thre dayes there, but that he determined to depart thence, and so he retourned to Kauenna by water, leauyng vp vtterly to the enemye bothe Dalmatia & Ly [...]rnie, the which immediatly Dalmatia, Lyburnia, & Illy ricū, are no [...]e called all by one name of Sclauony. without any re [...]istence came into the hands of Constantian.
❧ The. vj. Chapter.
¶ Belisariua arriueth in Italy, and after long [...] wynneth Naples.
[Page]BElisarius vppon the receipt of the The arriuall of Belisarius in Italy, Emperours letters, when he shuld passe into Italy, leauing garrisons of souldiours at Syracuse and Panormus, went with the residu [...] of his armie to M [...]ssana: and there wosted ouer vnto Regium. From thence he led his armie by lande through the Brutians and Lucanes, commaunding his nauie to coast him by the shore of the neither sea as nere the land as might be. As he went forwarde, the inhabitants of those coūtreys reuolted to him thick and threfold. When he had after thys sort certaine dayes continued his iourney, Belisarius cō meth to Naples. at length he stayed about Naples, the which citie was kept with a great and strong garrison of the Gothes.
There he commaunded his shippes to lye at anchour in the hauen, but yet w tout the shot of artillery, & he himselfe in the meane tyme bringing his army nere vnto the towne, viewed the situation of the citie & the nature of y • place vpon the land. It was not long after [Page 14] but that he tooke by composition a strōg bulwarke standyng in the Suburbes. Therevppon as he was about to plant hys siege, the Neapolitans sent theyr Oratours vnto him, among whome was one Stephan a man of much wisdome and authoritie in the citie.
He spake these wordes in effect: that The words of the Neapolitan ambassadour to Belis. Belisarius dyd not well to make war vppon the Neapolitans, whiche neuer had done hym any wronge in all his lyfe. They inhabited a citie kept by the garrisons of Theodatus and the Gothes, by meanes whereof he could not hope for any thyng at theyr hands beyng vnder the iurisdiction and sub [...]ion of other men. But yf so be it he myght be so bolde to say hys mynd, he dyd vnaduisedlye to l [...]nger there in vayne. For hadde he once gotten Rome, he shoulde strayghte wayes obteyne Naples. But yf he were sette besyde Rome, he were not able to keepe Naples though he had it.
[Page]Wherefore it had bene méeter for him to haue gone firste of all to Rome against the Gothes that wer there, and not to haue stayed at Naples, the which should fall as an ouerplus to the lot The answere of Belisarius to thembassadour. of the Conquerour which way so [...] the world went. Belisarius replied therevnto, that whether he did aduisedly or vnaduisedly in tariyng aboute Naples, was no part of their charge to determine, for he asked not their counsell therein: but rather to take thought for those things that perteined to them selues, namely whether it were better for them to procure their owne saufegarde and libertie by receyuynge the Emperours armye, or by continuyng in bondage vnder the barbarous Gothes worthely to be besieged and vtter ly destroyed. For he was fully purposed not to depart thence vntyll he had the citie at his pleasure, his desier was to obteyne the towne rather withoute their destruction then w t it. This was his saying openly. And secretly he persuaded [Page 15] Stephan to [...] his Citizens rather to seke themperours good will & Good counsel if it had bene taken. fauour, then his indignation & displeasure. Thoratours at their re [...]ourne into the citie, reported the words of Belisarius. And when thei came to consul tation as concerning the same, Stephen being demaunded his opinion in the case, saide he thought it to daungerous a matter for the [...]politanes, to tourne the brunt of so great a warre vppon themselues, and therefore he wisshed them by some composition or other, to prouide for their saufegarde. This counsell was furthered also by one Antiochus a Syrian borne, who had continued longe tyme at Naples as in the waye of traffique & marchandise, a man of great wealth & of much credit among the Neapolitanes, he by persuading the lyke that Stephan had done, had moued many to be of hys opinion: the people also & the commōs of the citie were desirous of the same. In so much that shoutes were openly [Page] heard crying out to haue the gates set open and Belisarius let in. There were about eyght hundred Gothes in garrison, who albeit that it greeued them to see these things, neuerthelcsse for as muche as they durste not withstand the wyll of the people, gathered themselues together. Pastor and Asclepiodotus citizens of Naples beyng The craftye dealing of Asclepiodotus and Pastor. frends of the Gothes, and therefore sorye to [...] the prescnt estate of the citie altered, when they sawe howe the people were bent, durste not openly gainsay theyr desyres, but wrought by an ouerthwart meanes to breake thagrement. And there vppon allowyng and praysing openly all that was determined in the assemblye, as though it had lyked them verye well, they counselled to knitte vp the matter stronglye with many bandes and couenaunts, requirynge Fayre wordes make fooles fayne & wyse men to some [...]. an othe for performinge of the same. The articles that they had deuised were suche as they thought Belisarius woulde not haue consented vnto, [Page 16] in especiallye seynge he shoulde be sworne to the performaunce of them. Therefore in as much as they seemed to speake these thynges of good wyll to the people, they obteyned to haue the decree made accordynge to theyr owne deuise. And therevppon all thynges were penned and fayre wordes engroced. Stephan was sent with the Booke from the Citie to Belisarius. Who after he hadde perused the same agreed to euery article, and offered to be sworne for the keeping of thē. Stephan returned and brought worde thereof into the citie. Wherat the people The malice of Pastor and [...] brusteth [...]. greatly reioysing began to runne to the gates, sayinge that Belisarius should be let in. Pastor and Asclepiodotus seyng this, when they perceyued that their first crafts tooke no place, called together the Gothes and citizens of Naples such as wer of their own faction. Declaring vnto them that it was a folly to lose the towne at the [...] of the vnskylfull multitude.
[Page]For what man had so lytle witte that could not vnderstand, that if Belisarius were in any hope at all of winning the citie, he would neuer haue consented to tharticles that were sent vnto him. But nowe because he was out of all hope, he had graūted to those things which he would not stand to, to thentent to make them traitours at theyr vttermoste peryll. For if he bare them so much good wyll as he pretended, he would not haue there taricd to surprise thē by subteltie, but would haue kept on his way to trye the matter by battel against Theodatus and his Gothes. By alledgynge these and suche other thyngs, they both persuaded the Citizens to make resistence, and also encouraged the Gothes to stand to the de fence of the Citie. Besids this they armed the Iewes, of the which ther was a great multitude in Naples, & caused them to take their parte. By meanes whereof the rest of the citizins were put in feare, and all the communicatiō [Page 17] and couenaunts with Belisarius wer broken. Belisarius therefore after that time addressed himselfe to the siege. Oftentymes when he attempted to winne it by assaulte, he was put to the repulse with great losse and peryll of hys souldiours. For the walles of Naples are partly enuironed with the sea, and partly do stand vppon high and steepe places, so that it is a very harde matter to scale them. The conduit pypes by which water ranne into the citie, albeit they were all broken by Belisarius: yet not withstanding it semed to be no great discommoditie to them that were besieged, because they had manye Welles in the towne, so that they could want no water. But most of all hurted them the hope of helpe to come, for as much as thei had sent their Ambassadours to Rome for ayde against their enemies. Now as Belisarius was in maner paste hope, and thought to haue broken vp his siege, Fortune wonderfully opened the way [Page] of conquest vnto him. There was a wa ter chanel cut deepe into the groūde by which water was wont to be cōueyed into the citie. This at the beginning of the siege had Belisarius broken (as he had done other before). A certain souldier of Clandiople by chaunce entering into the same, went in it hard to the walles of the citie. There was at the place where it went vnder the wall Good fortune of Belisarius. a stone not layed by mannes hand but of nature, through the whiche there was a hole bored to let the water into the citie. But the hole was not so wyde that a man might enter in at it. The which when the souldier had well viewed, he perceyued that if the hole in the stone were made wyder, they myght haue passage into the Citie.
And therevppon he made Belisarius priuye to all that he hadde seene. The Captaine greatly reioysyng thereat, and promisynge great rewardes, bade the souldyer choose some of hys fellowes to helpe hym, and to open the [Page 18] stone more, not by diggynge and heawynge least the noyse of the strykynge should be wray them, but by fyling and scrapyng and that very softly. Loke as the Captayne commaunded so the souldyer dyd. To be short, through the continuall and diligent paynestakyng of the souldyer it was brought to that poynt, that a man in harnesse wyth hys sworde and hys target in his hand myght eas [...]y go through. When the matter stood in thys case, Belisarius perceyuyngc he shoulde bee mayster of the Citie when he lyst hyinselfe, the clementie and mercy of Belisarius. and lothe that hys souldyers shoulde sacke it, called out Stephan vnto him againe, and putte hym in remembraunce of the miserable chaunces that are wonte to happen vnto Cities that are taken perforce, as the slaughter of men, the rauyshyng of women at euery Uarlettes pleasure, the burnyng of houses, the sackyng and reuing of all places, and all other kyndes of mischiefes.
[Page]Wherefore he willed the Neapolitans to haue respect vnto them selues, and not to abyde the vttermost at their peryll, for as yet they had tyme to repent them of their folly, Stephan hearynge these thinges, at his retourne declared the same to his citizens with sighes and teares. But they despising his wordes had hym in derison for his labour.
Belisarius therefore executynge hys The meane whereby Belisarius won Naples. prepensed purpose, when he had fully determined to take the citie, prouided for the same in this maner. Assoone as euer it beganne to be darke, he chose out foure hundred souldiours, commaundynge euery one of them to put on hys harnesse and to take his sword [...] and hys target in his hande, and being so armed in a readinesse, to kepe themselues close without noyse, vntyll they had knowledge what they should doe. He appoynted leaders of them Magnus and Emias stout men, in whose puissaunce he dyd putte muche confidence. When it was now past mydnyght, [Page 19] he disclosed the matter to the leaders, and shewyng them the place commaundeth them to lead che souldiers through the channell by torchelyght. And assoone as they were gotten into the citie, he taught them what they should doe, wyllyng them to take some part of the walle, and to geue token thereof by the sound of a trumpet. He him selfe had prepared before hand a great sort of ladders to scale the wals with, commaundyng all his armye to be ready in their harnes, wherof he had the nymblest and best practised aboute his owne persone. Whyles he was Shame surmounteth dread of dau [...] ger. thus aboute his matters, many of the souldiers that were with Magnus retyred backe for feare of the daunger, and could not be made to go forwarde, neyther by fayre meanes nor by foule. Whome Belisarius sent away wyth great rebuke, supplying their roomes with two hundred of them▪ that he had about him. Uppon the which reproche euen they that before refused to go, folowed. [Page] The souldiers went a long and a blynde way in the chanell. For it ended not at the wall, but led further into the citie, being vaulted ouer aloft with B [...]cke In so much that y • souldiers wist not where they were, vntyll they espyed the skye at the ende of the vault. Then they perceyued themselues to be in the middes of the citie, out of the which place it was a hard matter for them to escape, because they had ylfauoured clymbing vp vpon the high walles wherew t it was enclosed round about. Neuerthelesse at length when one had helpe [...] vp another & all were come owt, they went to the walles Naples is tate [...]. there hauing slayne the watchemen toke two towres, & from thens gaue asigne by sownding atrumpet, and making a greate shoute. By and by Belisarius made toward the same plates, and rering vp ladders comaunded his souldyers to scale y • towne. In the same place happened much trouble & muche taryens, by reason the ladders [Page 20] (being made secretly by ame) were not able to reach the toppe of the wall. By meanes whereof they were driuen of necessitie, to bynde two ladders one at thend of another, & so to get vp. This was done on the northside of the town, and at the same instaunt was a sharpe encounter at the other side of y • towne that is toward the sea. For in the same place fought a multitude of Iewes, leud & desperat persōs, such as hoped for The desparate fighting of the iewes. no fauour nor mercy if y • citie were taken. And therefore they stood stoutly at defens, geuing no place of entrance to thenemie. Another part of the host had set fier on y • East gate, & made hast to breake into the citie. In the meane season the day began to breake, & the souldiers y • had scaled vp by ladders, had bro ken open a gate to let in tharmy, & ther withall thother company russhed in at the East gate y • was before set on fier. Then was there running through the citie, and all places were defiled with slaughter and [...].
[Page]But inespecially those souldyers played the Butchers, whose brothers or kinsfolke had bene slaine in the former conflictes by the Neapolitans a boute the Citie. For they after that y e towne was taken, vsed the victorie very cruelly, sparing no age yong nor old man nor woman. And the Iewes, whiche defended that part of the Towne that is toward the sea, when all the rest of the towne was taken, stode neuer the lese styfly at their defens, neyther gaue thei ouer before that the souldiers ronuyng aboute the Citie, assayled them behynd. Then was enterans made on that parte of the Citie also, and euery place was repleneshed with slaughter The clementie and gentle vsing of the victorye by Belisarius. and sacking. But Belisarius himself after the taken of Naples, vsed the victorie veri gently. For after that weapō was ones Layd out of hand, he suffered not any Citizen to be eyther slayne or taken prysoner, and he restored the women to their husbandes and parentes vnrauished and vndefiled at all. [Page 21] Towarde the Gothes also which were there in garrison, he shewed no maner of cruelty. As for Pastor and Asclepiodotus the Authours and causes of so great mischiefes, not Belisarius, but Euyll counsel worst to the geuers therof the people of the towne themselues did iustice vppon. Who the next day after the taking of the citie, ranne to theyr houses and finding Asclepiodotus at home kylled hym and drewe hym thorough the citie. But they coulde not finde Pastor. For he euen in the verye tumult of the taking of the citie, either wilfully slew him selfe, or ells dyed for despaire and sorow of mynde. Yet notwithstaindinge the people bearynge a deadly hatred against him, neuer left sekyng him, vntill such tyme as they fawe hys dead carcas wyth their eyes. Neyther coulde they be satisfied, but that they tare hys bodye in pecces euerye member from other. And Belisarius did beare with theyr outragious dealynge, for the euyll whych they had cōmitted, vpō whom such cruelty was [Page] extended. Naples therefore was by this meanes bothe taken and saued.
❧ The. vij. Chapter.
¶ The Gothes kyll Theodatus and set vp Virigis to be theyr Kyng, Vitigis maketh an oration to the Senate and people of Rome, and leadeth awaye the chiefe of them with him for pledges, he marryeth the doughter of Amulusuentha and entereth in league with the Frenche men. Belisarius commeth to Rome, whiche is yelded to hym by the Citizens, he fortifieth and victaileth the citie and getteth certaine townes from the Gothes.
THE Gothes that dwelte at Rome and other places thereaboutes, hearyng of these thinges that were done at Naples, were stryken with great feare and mistruste in them selues. For they beleued vndoutedly that Belisarius would come against them. Wherefore encouraging one another, and calling forth the rest that were men of warre of theyr owne nation, they encamped themselues betwene the cities of Ana [...]a & [Page 22] Taracina. There when the chief men of warre of the Gothes were assembled together, findyng great faulte with the former misgouernent & present The election of Vitigis with the depo sition & deat [...] of Theodat [...] to wa [...]dnesse of Theodatus, finally they made insurrection against him in the campe, and set vp Uitigis to be their kynge. This Uitigis was not borne of the blood royall, but he had alwayes be [...]e knowen for a stout Captain & a good man of warre, & through his valiaunt behauiour he had purchased much honour & authoritie. Theoda tus when he hard thereof, stale priuely away & fled toward Rauenna with all the spede he could make. But the new king sending of his gard immediatly af fer him, ouertooke him by y e way & killed him. After this Uitigis came to Ro me, & there making an oration to the Senate & the people, put thē in remem brance of the bene [...]its of Theodorich, The oration of Vitigis to the Romains. exhorting thē not to worke any nouelties. For he told them that the Gothes had a great power in Italye, and that [Page] those things which had lately hapened chaūced not through the imbecillitie & weakenes of their nacion, but because that the Gothes could not find in their harts to loue & obey Theodatus. But now considering they agreed all in one will & drew all by one lyne, cleane contrary effects must nedes followe. And therefore no man should be able to attempt any alteration hereafter in Italy, but that he shoulde be met with to his cost. Al these things he did discourse before Liberius bishop of Rome. And for because he was but a newe founde kyng, he caused the bishop & the people to swere to be trew vnto him. For the more assuraunce wherof, he chose manye of the Senatours and people of Rome, whome he ledde with him as pledges, committing the charge of the citic to one of his noble men called Luderis, with whome he left foure thousande chosen souldyers to keepe Rome withall. He hym selfe with the residue of his army made towarde Rauenna. [Page 23] When he came thither, to the entent the moore to establishe his estate, he tooke in mariage the doughter of Amulusuentha Vitigis marieth. [...] vnto the late Theo dorich, whome Theodatus had kept in warde lyke a prisoner. And so by aliyng him self with the blood royall, he aduaunced the honour and dignitie of his crowne. This done, he ceased not to muster the Gothes through all his realme, and to furnysh them throughly with horse and harnesse, and vigilantly to prouide for all kynde of munitions and artilerie for the warres.
But as Uitigis was aboute to assemble the Gothes that were about the riuer Po and the citie Pauie and other places in Lūbardy of which there was great power and an huge number, a stoppe was cast in hys way, namely the feare of the French nacion. For at that tyme they had extended their dominion euen vnto the Alpes, and on thys side the Alpes the Gothes possessed al. These two nacions were scarce frends [Page] one to another, but rather more then halfe enemies through priuie hartburnyng among them selues. Furthermore it was well knowen, that themperour [...] ente [...]eth in league wyth the Frenchmen. had lately sollicited the French men to make warre against the Gothes. For the which causes Uitigis sen ding his Ambassadours into Fraunce endeuored to rid himself of that feare, the which he at length obteyned by entring in league and frendshippe with them. Whyle Uitigis was laying for these things before hand, in the meane season Belisarius hauynge refreshed and furnished his armie, determined to go to Rome. Wherevppon leauing Herodian with a garrison at Naples, and another garrison lykewise at Cume, he with the residue marched toward Rome. His iorney lay by the way that leadeth from Rome into Latium. The Romains hearing of Belisarius approche, were nothing discontended therewith. It chauuced so that one Fidelis of Millaine (who in the tyme of [Page 24] Athalericke had bene stewarde of the kings house) departing frō Rome met with Belisarius, & counsailed him to bring his hoste with all spede nere to y • The Romai [...] become impe rialles. citie, for he told him that the Romains were not minded to shut their gates against y • emperours army. And in dede by al mens talke it was to be sene that the people were of the same mind with in the citie. With the which thinges the Gothes being sore dismayed that were left there in garrison, determined fully to go all awaye: sauyng the Captayn Luderis: who standing vpon his reputation, had rather to haue died then to abandon the town cōmitted to his charge. The Romains gaue y • Gothes free passage w tout interruption. And so it fortuned that at y • very same day & houre that the Gothes went out of Rome at the gate of Flaminius, Be lisarius entered in at y • gate Celimontana, otherwise called Asinaria. After y • Belisariꝰ had ben receiued into y • town with great ioye & gladnes of all [...]ates, [Page] he made an oration before the Senate and the people, & afterward vsed great diligence in repairing the walles & fortifiyng Belisarius fortifi [...]h and vic tayleth Rome of the citie. For he not onelye mended the walles and buylded bulworks in places conuenient, but also cast vp trenches and rampyres aboute them. And moreouer conueyghed thither great store of grayne by water, the which he caused to be layed vp in common graners. The Romaines although they wondered at the wisdome of their captaine, yet thei lyked not this his so exquisite diligence in fortifiyng of the citie. For so noble a captaine as he was beinge entered into Rome w t the emperours armye, ought not to thinke of being besieged, but of besieging others. Howbeit to say the trueth Belisarius weying with himselfe hys owne weakenes & the great power of the Gothes, did already in his mynde forese what was lyke to ensue. And yet was he not altogether ydle in y • meane season, but by his petie captains Constantin [...] [Page 25] and Bessas, the same time he Belis [...] g [...] teth three townes from the Gothes. recouered Narma, Spolet, & Peruse by composion. Also there was a battell fought againste the Gothes not farre frō the citie of Now called Perugio. Peruse. For Uitigis immediatly vppon intelligence of the reuolting of y • Perusians, sent Uuilas and Pyssa with an army into Thuscane to the entent as well to kepe styll in due obedience such as had not reuol ted, as also to subdue againe suche as had forsaken their allegeaunce.
[...] The. viij. Chapter.
¶ A battell is foughte at Peruse betwene the Gothes and the Imperialles to the losse of the Gothes. Vitigis marchynge towarde Rome stayeth at the ryuer Anio, where the next day encountryng wyth Belisari [...] he putteth hym to flyghte and so procedeth to the siege of Rome wyth two hundred thousande men.
THere was at Peruse Constantine one of Belisarius captaines, and he had assembled thyther all [Page] hys men of warre sauyng a fewe souldiers A battell betwene the Gothes and the imperialls that he hadde lefte in garrison at Spolet. Now at such time as the Gothishe armye approched and was come almoste hard to the walles of Peruse, Constantine with his men in order of battel readie to fyght, yssued out of the Citie and set vpon the Gothes. Great was thencounter with much force and puissans on bothe sydes. The Gothes were greatly furthered by their multitude, and the souldiers of Constantine by the aduantage of the place, & thassistens of the Citie at hand. After longe fyghtinge, the Gothes at length were ouercome & put to flight, great slaughter was made of them and many were taken prisoners, amonge whō Uuilas and Pyssa the Captaynes were taken and sent to Rome vnto Belisarius. Uitigis therefore hauinge besydes the losse of his townes receiued moreouer this slaughter, thoughte it was not to make any further delaye, but wyth all the power of the Gothes that he was [Page 26] able to raise, set forward to y e warres. when he remoued from Rauenna toward Vitigis marcheth toward Rome wyth 200000. souldyers. Rome, he had in his hoste. CC. M. fyghting men, of which y • most part were armed in Almain riuetts. With this so huge hoste he marched toward Rome in suche terrible maner, & wyth suche spede, that it was to be doubted least that Belisarius would not haue abydden his comming. And therefore he made not anye staye eyther at Spolet, Peruse, or Narma, but kept on his waye styll toward Rome. Belisarius when he perceyued so great a brunt of warres turned vppon hys necke, commaunded Constantine and Bessas to returne to him out of hand, wyth such power as they had aboute them. Constantine obeyed his commaundement and came wyth hys armye forthwyth out of Thuscane to Rome. But it was somewhat later ere that Bessas did set out of Narma, in so much that he was entangled with the firste foreriders of the Gothes. For Uitigis way lay hard [Page] vnder Narma. Whether as sone as y • Currours were come, Bessas yssued out of the city and skirmished w t them, & he put many of their troopes to flight and slew diuers of thē. Neuertheles by reason of resorte of mo & mo stil to y e res [...]owe, he was cōpelled to withdraw hī self again into the citie. From whence he made hast to Rome & bare tidinges that y e Gothes were at hande & within kenning. The Gothes passing by Nar ma went through the country of y e Sa bines into the fields of Rome. When they came nere the town they staied at the riuer Anio. For belisarius had fortt fied the bridge on both sides y • water w e bulwarks & enclosures, & had set a garrisō of souldiers to kepe it. By meanes wherof y e Gothes at their first cōming being not able to get ouer, encamped thēselues beyond the riuer Anio. But The shameful flight of the souldiers of Belisarius. y • next night folowing they y • were set to kepe the bridge, being dismaied at y e number & fercenesse of the barbarous people, forsoke the towres & bulwarks [Page 27] of the bridge, & stealing priuely away went into Cāpanie for feare least Belisarius should punishe thē for their labour. Belisarius was minded to haue pitched his campe by the riuer Anio directly against y e campe of the Gothes, to thentent to haue deteined them the longer in y e same place. And therfore y e next day he went thither w t a M. horsemen to view the coūtry & the Deameanour of his enemies & also to chose a meete grounde to encampe in. As he An encounter vnloked for. was going thether, when he came almost at the riuer, contrary to his expectation he met with the Gothyshe horse men. For the Gothes but euen a lyttle while before, perceiuing y e bulwarkes of the brydge to be abandoned, had broken open the gates and the barryers, and had passed ouer the Ryuer in greate number. Whose sodayne approche vppon Belisarius other wyse then he looked for, constrayned hym whether he woulde or no to put hymselfe to the encounter.
[Page]At the beginning Belisarius executed nothing but thoffice of a Captaine, encouraging and commaunding his soul diers and sh [...]winge what euerye man s [...]ould doe. But when he saw his men ouerlayed & like to go by the worse end of the staffe, then was he of necessitie compelled to leaue the office of a Captaine, and to playe the stout souldiour. For he was fayn [...] to put himselfe into the forefront of the battell, and there to laye his hands about him stoutlye and valiātly as other of his souldiers. The which daye surely he was in great dan ger vpon such occasion. He had a goodly horse, vpon which he was commōly wont to ryde, of colour bay w t a white lyste from his foreheade downe to the nostrelles, as he fought vpon the same horse among the formest in the battell, certain runnagats knowing him, cried out to strike the Uale. (For so doe the Gothes terme a bay horse in their l [...]nguage,) & there was none other noise ouer all the fyeld but to strike y e Uale. [Page 28] By meanes whereof it came to [...], that all the brunt of the battel was tur ned vpon Belisarius. And vndoutedly Daunger the whetstone of courage. if a puisant band of his verye familier frendes had not clustered aboute hym and styked notably to him, yea and w t their owne bodies and their owne armour, kept of a thousand strok [...]s and a thousande weapons bothe from the horse and from Belisarius himself also, it had neuer bene possible for hym to haue escaped. But as at y • time he was valiantlye defended, both by hys own prowesse fighting most expertly & conningly, and also by the helpe of his frends and familiars, who with incredible lo [...]e clynged fast about [...] hym. In thys place manye of Belisarius v [...]rye fr [...]nds were slain, and inespecially one Maxentius a man of singular actiuity who fyghting about. Belisarius, after that he had shewed many profes of his manhood and prowess [...], and s [...]aine ma ny of the Gothes, at the last being very sore wounded fell downe dead. At th [...] [Page] length such as were about Belisarius making prease vpō their enemi [...]s, put thē to open flight, & pursued them har [...] to the bridge. But the footemen y • stod at the bridge recountred Belisarius & his men, & easly put them backe. The horsemen seyng y •, turned again & assai led thē behind, by [...] wherof they were of necessity compell [...]d to w tdraw themselues for their own saufgard vnto a higherground. There also thencoū Belisarius is compelled to [...]. ter of horsmen being renued, & the nū ber of the enemies still encreasing, after y • many had bene slaine on both par tes, at length they were forced to fly to ward Rome vppon the spurre. They ranne towarde the gate that is commonlye called Pincian. The Gothes chaced Belisarius hard to the gate inso much y • some were striken from the wall. There was also muche a doe in the same place. For the Romains that kept the walles, for feare of their enemies so nere at hand, durste not open the gate. Neither was Belisarius him [Page 29] selfe knowen, albeit he called alowd vn to them, bicause the Sunne was then down, & he sore disfigured with duste & Belisarius putteth the Gothes to flight. swette. Therefore when they had cast themselues in a ring before the gate & could notbe l [...]t in, & that thenemy was hard at their backs, Belisarius encouraging his men, gaue a new charge vp on his enemies, & putting thē to slight draue them far frō the gate. So when he had dispersed his enemyes, he was then perfectly knowen, & led his souldiers into the citye. The feyght of this day was very sore and variable. For it beganne anone after the sonne rising, & it ended not vntil it was darke night. Belisarius by the iudgement of al mē was demed the best warriour that day that was on his syde. And amonge the Gothes, [...]. When Belisarius was returned into the Citie, he commaunded as well his owne souldyers as the Townesemen to keepe watche on the walles that nyghte.
[Page]Distributinge the gates to his Captaines euery one, one to kepe. Geuyng them charge that if any alarme were geuen, no man should styrre out of the place where he was appoynted. The A larmes geven to the Citie of [...]ome. in the nyght. same night many Alarmes were geuē and diuers of theym false. For it was cried through the Citie that thenemye was entred in at the gate of Ianiculū, and therevpon̄ weapon was fearefully taken in hand. And the noyse could not be stynted, vntill such time as messengers comming from thence, brought word that all was quiet and no enemy sene or heard of there. At the gate Salaria was another Alarme, & that not wythoute some cause. For the Gothes comming to the gate in the night, called to the Romaines that stoode vpon the walls, & there one of them named Bachius a mā well knowen in Rom [...] whom Uitigis had sent thether for the same purpose, spake vnto them saying The wordes of Bachius to the Romanes. How is it with you ye Romaines are ye not ashamed of your follye? to commit [Page 30] your selues to the tuicion of a few Grekyshe men, mariners, and plaiers, of enterludes, & good for nothing els, despising y • power of the Gothes, whiche euen at their very fyrste comming haue put them to flighte and beseiged them? Surely the Gothes haue not de serued that ye shoulde worke so greate treason against them. But repent and amend, for this is thonely way for you to escape, yf you wyll open the gate for the Gothes to enter in, not against you but against those Grekes. But if ye be so mad to persist in your folly, loke assuredlye for such warre at the Gothes hands, as, wilbe to whote for you to abyde. Thys oure kynge Uitigis commaunded to be told vnto you. The Ro maines made none aunswere at all to his wordes. But as sone as it was reported that y e Gothes were there, there was ronning thether from all parts of the citie. The Gothes hauing taryed a lyttle whyle, returned to their kinges tent which was betwene the citye and [Page] the riuer. And thus passed ouer y • firste night. The next day the Gothes seyng no body come forth to giue them battel in the field, adressed themselues to the sieg [...]. Thorder wherof was this.
The. ix. Chapter.
¶ Thorder of the seige of Rome, the pollitique prouision of Belisarius for the defence of the same, what engines the Gothes made for to assaulte the same, and of their goynge to the assault.
THey pitched theyr tentes in syxe The siege of Rome. places about the citie, frō the way of flaminius, vnto the waye that leadeth to Preuesie. This campe beseged fiue gates of the citie. Afterward they embattelled the. vii. campe on the further syde of the brydge Miluius. This last Campe bes [...]iged the gate of Aurelius and cutte of the wayes that leade ouer the Ryuer Tyber. They fortified theyr campes with diches and trenches and turrettes of timber. And [Page 31] as wel on the oneside as on the other of the Tyber they made hauocke of all y • came in their waye. Belisarius on the contrary part prouided in this wise for the defence of the city. The gate called Pinciana which was directly againste the greater campe of the Gothes, toge ther w t the nextegate vnto it on y • right hād called Salaria, & whatsoeuer was on that part of the walles therabouts. Belisarius toke vnto himselfe tokepe. The gate towarde Preueste he committed to Bessas. The gate of Flaminius whiche is on the left hande of the Pincian gate, he deliuered to Cōstantin: and at euerye other of the gates he set a keper. The Gothes goyng about the Citye brake all the Conduittes. The cond [...] aboute the Citye. There were of theym in all fourtene made of wonderfull work [...], by the whi ch water was conueyed into the Citie. By the breakynge of these, the Romaynes were not so greatelye afflycted wyth scarcetye of water, as wyth want of [...].
[Page]For the conduit that ranne downe frō the toppe of Ianiculum, throughe the furtherside of Tiber into the city, run ning swiftly downe the stepe hyll, dyd driue many mylles. The lyke commodity of grinding was also ministred by other of the conduits in diuers places. The which being then brokē, brought great distresse vpon them that were be seiged. Against this displeasure Belisa A prouision for grinding of corne. rius prouided this remedie. Two ligh ters with a space betwene theym for a whele to goe in, were fastned together with strong rafters of timber, vpon the which the milles were set and so driuē with the swiftnes and violence of the streame, and the lighters were stayed with Cables streyned hard and made fast on both sydes of the Ryuer. These lyghters he placed harde by the firsie brydge that leadeth ouer Tiber. After those he set other lyghters on a rowe. And least the enemye might hurte the lighters by casting downe fyre or other stuffe from alofte, there were cheynes [Page 32] of yron drawē by the brydge to receiue all such gere, and men set on both sides to take the same & cary it away. Thus was good prouison made to supply the want of milles, for those lighters suffyced to grynd as much as they would. As for the want of water, that dyd the ryuer Tiber supplye. Belisarius had on diuers places of the walles deuised many engines to strike and put backe thenemy withall. On the otherside the Engines for to assault the towne, Gothes prouided great store of artillerie and engines for the winning of the Citie. The engins were these. Fyrste fowr [...] battell Rammes whiche were made after this fashion. Foure postes of timber of lyke hygh equallye distant are sette square one ageinste another. These pyllers are fastened with eyght ouerwayes foure at the toppe & foure at y • foote, so that it standeth as it were a pretye square house. The same is c [...] uerd aboue with leather to the entent that such as are within it should not be hurte from the walles. Aloft is laide a [Page] beame ouerthwart at thende whereof hangeth downe another beame as it were to the middell of y • pillars fastned w t plates of yron, y • which hath a great square head of stelelike vnto an anuild. The whole engine is driuen vpō foure wheles fastened in the feete of pillars. When it is remoued frō place to place there are not fewer then L. souldyers within it to driue it forward. Who after the time they haue brought it nere vnto the walle, doe with a certayne wynch wey vp the foresaid beame that The great force of the battell Ram. lyeth ouerthwart, and when it is aloft doe let it fall with all the whole swaye that it hath. Then the head of y • beame being let downe, partlye with violence and partly with weight falling vpon y • wall, dothe batter and breake in peces al that euer it lighteth vpon. Moreouer the Gothes made Turretes of Tymber of lyke heigh with the walles, the whiche went vppon fyue wheles a pece. Also they prepared a great number of skaling ladders, together with [Page 33] an innumerable sorte of faggottes of shrubbes and strawe to fyll vp the dyches. When all thynges were in sufficient readinesse, Uitigis commaunded all hys men to be in armour by the breake of the next daye, whom he deuided into companyes, appoyntynge what he would haue euery man to doe The Gothes were verye glad of it Thassault of Rome. and wonderfull desyrous of thassault, some carrying faggotts, some bearing skalyng Ladders and other some dryuyng the engines toward the walles. Belisarius stoode vppon the vamure before the gate wyth the tallest men Thvnskilfulnesse of the Gothes. that he coulde chose oute in all hys hoste, geuynge all the reste of hys retinewe charge, not to styrre oute of theyr places before he gaue theym warnynge. The Turrettes (which I toolde you that the Gothes had prepared) were drawen wyth Oxen and sette before the reste of the other engynes.
[Page]The which thing whē Belisarius behelde, he laughed at the simplicitie of the Gothes, that they should thinke naked Oxen able to drawe an engine against armed enemies. And thervpon he commaunded all hys men to dyscharge their arrowes at them, the whi ch beynge done and thoren forthwyth [...]aine, the engine stood still and coulde be remoued no further. Such as caried skalinge ladders and faggottes to fill vp the dyches, being repulsed with the number of weapons commynge from the vamure, coulde neyther fyll the diches, nor gette vnto the walles, nor yet brynge the battell Rammes nere. Neuertheles the battell of the Gothes abode by it, and castinge their sheldes ouer their heades, sometyme wyth plaine force came harde to their enemyes, howbeit they were neuer able to winne the vamure. Thencounter was with arrowes, dartes, Iauelings [...]kes and all other kind of artillerie.
❧ The. x. Chapter.
¶ The maner of the assault, the discription of the tumbe of the Emperour Adrian and the d [...]acing of the same, the repulse of the Gothes, the murmuringe of the Romaines agaynste Belisarius, whercp [...]n he aduerti [...]eth themperour of his peril & necessity.
WHyle these things were in doing at the Pincian & Salaria gates, The continuance of the assault. Rome was assaulted in three other places. For Uitigis setting parte of his armie to kepe Belisarius occupied, went hymselfe with a number of souldiers to the gate that leadeth to preneste. And at the same instant another companie of the Gothes assaulted the gate of Aurelius. Another sorte of them endeuored to brust in at the gate that is on y • tope of Ianiculum. Thus was Rome assaulted in foure places at ones at the gates Pinciana and Salaria which Belisarius himself kepte, at the gate prenestine where Bessas [Page] stood, and at the gates of Aur [...]ius and Ianiculum. But the Gothes that assaulted Ianiculum were easlye put [...]acke. For the place is stepe and vneasie to [...]ome vnto, insomuch that a man could not well get to the wall though there were no bodye to let hym. And therefore must their enterpryse nedes be to none effect, the place beyng defended by Paule one of Belisarius cap taines with a puissant band of souldiers. At the gate of Aurelius was some what more daunger. The waye was v [...]ulted ouer that leadeth to the church of Saynct Peter thappostle. The Gothes Thassaulting of Adri [...]s Pyle. hydynge themselues in the sayde Porche, [...] as they espyed tyme for theyr purpose, brake sodaynely oute of theyr ambushe, and in all haste made toward Adryans Pyle to winne it. And they dyd so muche wyth theyr Ladders, that at the fyrste brunte they tooke the vttermoste wall whyche encloseth the Pile and was foure square. [Page 35] Thys Pyle was the sepulchre of the Emperour Adrian buylded of moste The [...] of Adri [...] tumbe. excellent and costly workemanshippe. The fyrste circuyt was made fowresquare, all of whyte Marble of the Ilande Paros, garnyshed throughoute wyth most exquysite workes and portraytures. In the inyddes of this square ryseth vppe as it were a tower of a verye great heyg [...]th, and of such a breadeth that a man were scarse able to throwe a stone directclye from the one syde to the other of the floore that was on the toppe. It hathe a brydge leadynge from thcnce ouer the Tyber into the Cytye. For the Citye endethe at the Ryuer Tyber, and thys is on the furthersyde of the Ryuer. Yet notwythstandynge bycause it had a brydge stretchynge harde to the walles of the Cytye, and was (as it were) a certayne Towre or bulwarke, Belisarius prouyded before hand to haue it well manned and [Page] kept with his owne souldiers, committing the charge therof to Constantine. Constantine therefore when as a lytle before he sawe hys enemies passinge ouer the Riuer Tiber in botes, to assault that part of the Citie which is be twene the fielde of Mars and the gate of Aurelius, f [...]aring the lownesse of y • watles, (for they were not very strong and defensible theraboutes nere vnto the Riuer) ranne thyther from Adrians pyle with a band of souldiers, leauing but a fewe behind him for the defence of the pyle. The Gothes herevpon (as we said before) hauinge by meanes of thabsence of the Captaine gottē the outer ci [...]cuit, endeuored also to winne the pyle it selfe. The souldiers that were abou [...], to thentent the more to endomage & repulse their enemies, The defacing of an excellēt pie [...] of work committed an euill acte. There were in the toppe of the pyle on euerye syde, vpon the battlementes great ymages of men, horses, and chariottes, conning [...]y deuised and [...]cellentlye wroughte. [Page 36] Some of these the souldyers tumb led downe w [...]ole vppon their enemies, other some thei brake in pieces to throw at thē. And so whether it were through the rudenes or through the lewdnes of the souldiers, within few howers were destroied the excellent inuentions of y e conningest workmen in all the world, whiche cost so many yeres in making, and which were the greatest ornamen tes and the very beautie of the tumbe. A drians pyle is rescowed. Constantyne hauynge in the meane while repulsed the enemy from the ryuer, hearing in what [...] the pile was, rescowed it by the bridge, and assailed his enemies from beneth, wherwith his owne souldiers were greatly recomforted and encouraged. By thys meanes the Pyle at length was sau [...]d, and the enemy repulsed. At the gate to ward pren [...]e also (where Uitigis and the Gothes that he brought with hym gaue the assault) was great daunger. For not farre from the said gate was a place called Uiuariū. The same was [Page] double walled, wyth a good space betwen the two walles. The ground be twene thē was very plaine and leuell, and the walles somewhat weake. Uitigis [...]ome i [...] daū ger to be taken by as [...]. therfore and the Gothes geuing assaulte to the [...]ttermoste wall, albeit that there was valeant and manful de fence made agaynste theym, yet they wanne it by fine force. Then Bessas (to whose charge that part was cōmitted) mistrustinge that he was not able to continue long a [...]ainst so greate power of his enemyes, sent worde in all haste to Belisarus in what perill he stood, desyring him to come to his rescow w t al the [...]pede he could make. Belisarius somwhat moued with the mat ter. Left sufficient defence behind him at the gate Salaria, and hymselfe with a band of hys best souldyers ranne tho rowe the Citye to the same place. At hys comminge thyther thencounter was renewed a freshe, and the soul [...]iers beganne to take harte at the presence [Page 37] of theyr Captayne. The Gothes had vndermined the wall, and a great companye of them enteryng in at the brea [...]h stood betwene the two walles. By meanes whereof the feyghte was verye sharpe and cruell in the same place. In fyne thassaulte came to this ende, that the Gothes were cōstrained to retyre out at the same gappe where they [...]ame in, with greate slaught [...]r and losse of their people. As sone as The repulse of the gothes at the fyrste assaulte. they were gotten oute, theyr enemies pursewynge hard vppon them, chaced theym away, and set all theyr engines on fyre. The lyke chaunce happened vnto theym at the Gate Salaria. For the souldyers breakynge oute vppon theym, burnt vppe all theyr Turrets and other engynes. Thus was Rome in one daye bothe earnestlye ass [...]lted in manye places at ones, and valeantlye defended. There were slayn at these assaultes aboute three thou sand Goth [...], but yet the syege endured styll.
[Page]The Romaines albeit they had Belisarius The Romains murmur against Belisarius. in great admiracion for his prowesse, yet they murmured against him in that against so great a puissans of y • Gothes, he had with so small a handful in cōparison styrred vp so great warres & cast the Citi [...] of Rome into such extreme perill and imminent daunger. The which thinge Belisarius perceyuing Belisarius wri [...] to the [...]mperour. (for it was not done in huther mu ther) althoughe he had diuers other times before aduertised y • Emperour Iustinian therof. Yetnotwithstanding being as then greatly moued with the matter, he wrote more earnestly vnto him, declaring the beseigement of the Citie of Rome, with the huge multitude of his enemies and the litle handfull of his owne men. For he saide he had bene faine to diminishe his [...]rmye that he brought forth with him, by leauing garrisons of souldiers at Panormus and Syracuse in Sicill: and by manninge of Naples Cume, & other places in Italye, as ned [...] required for [Page 38] their defence and saufgard: so that he had no mo then v. thousand remaining about him, and yet he was beseged w t an host of. CC. M. The Romains vnacquainted with such perills, wold not endure the hasard of y • siege. As for his owne part, he had once vowed to spend his life in the Emperour Iustinians seruice, thende whereof he passed not greatly whether it came sone or late. Howbeit he said there was respecte to be had how much the same should redound to the honour or dishonour of the Empire of Rome.
¶ The. xi. Chapter.
¶ Themperour sendeth new succours in to Italy. Asinarius and Vligisalus Captaines of the Gothes besege Salons in Dalmatia, Vitigi [...] winneth Portua, and causeth all the Romaines to be put to death whom he helde at Rauenna as hostag [...]s. B [...]lisarius putteth all vnable folke for the wars oute of the citie for consuming of victalls, and banisheth the pope vpon suspicion of treason.
[Page]THe Emperour Iustinian was be The Emperour sendeth ne [...] succours into Italy [...]. rye sore moued at the receipte of these letters: and ther [...]vpon commaunded that certayne souldyers whi ch had bene put in a readynesse before [...] immediatly sayle into Italy, en tending with all spede to leuie a greater power. Ualerian and Martiā were appoynted Captaynes of th [...]se souldyers whyche he had alreadye prepared and whyche had wyntered all the dead tyme of that yere in A [...]toly and A [...]arname. The newes hereof beynge broughte to Rome, put the Romains in good comforte lokynge for theyr arriuall as sone as the tyme of the yere wold serue. While these thyngs were a dooynge at Rome, Asinarius and Uligisalus Captaynes of the Gothes The [...] besege Salō [...] [...]. (whom Uitigis had sent wyth an host of men into Dalmatia, appoyntynge to theym moreouer for theyr more strengthe a nauye of shyppes), be [...] Salons bothe by sea and lande For Constantian [...] hym [Page 39] selfe to weake to matche so huge a power as hys enemies had, fortifyed the Citie throughly before hand and abode the syege. Durynge the which, sometyme yssewinge oute of the towne, he dyd greate harme to the Go [...]es both [...]y sea and by lande. In thys meane time, Rome b [...]ganne to be more hardly distressed by the seyge. For Uitigis after the time that he had taken so dishonorable repulse at the foresayde assaulte, beynge therewith somewhat quickned, ceased not to s [...]ke & serche all meanes possible to be deuysed, whereby he myghte anoye hys beseeged enemyes. There was a hauen by the Sea syde standinge on the ryght hand of the Ryuer Tyber, and adioyning to the same a Cytye en [...]yroned wyth a stronge wall. In the whyche place were wo [...]te to be sette a lande all suche thynges as were broughte [...] water: and from thence agay [...] Vitigi [...] wynneth [...], eyther by land [...] or by water were conueyed to Rome.
[Page]Uitigis therfore sending thither sodain ly a great number of his souldiers, assailed the said citie of Portua vnwares and wonne it ere the townsmen could put themselues in a readines to make resystens aganst so greate a power of the Gothes. By taking of this towne strayt wayes [...]nsued great distresse at Rome, when their vent of fetching in of corne and victiualls was ones stopped. For the Gothes leauing a garison of souldiers there, dyd kepe both the The cruell commaundement of Vitigis against the Romayne hostages. towne and the mouth of Tiber suffering nothing to be conueyed in. It was not longe after but that Uitigis sent commaundement to Rauenna, that al the Citizens of Rome, which (as is declared) he led from thens and kept for ho [...]tages should be put to death. Many of them were of the nobility and many of the commanaltie (surely worthy per sonages) all the which tasted of one cup sauyng a few who hauinge incling of the matter before, escaped by flighte. Amonge the which number were Cer [Page 40] Ceruentinus & Reparatus the brother of Uigilius, that was afterward pope. For they hauing warning therof, fled into Fraunce and saued their lyues. the rest were all put to death. In the tyme that the Romaines moorned and lam [...]nted for the slaughter of theyr citizens at Rauenna, there came another sorrow in the necke of it. For Be lisarius fearinge least graine shoulde faile and waxe scarce, made proclamacion that the citizens should send away their wiues and children, wyth al thother multitude that was vnmete and vnable for the warres compelling hys men of warre also to doe the lyke whych had eyther Lemans or lackeys with in the towne. There were as yet two wayes left them to passe out at. One leading to Ostia by the left syde of the ryuer Tiber, and another through the fields cleane cōtrary from those places that were beseged by the [...]my. For the Gothes (as we haue sayd) dyd not enui ron the whole Citie with their syege, [Page] but onely from the gate of Aurelius to the gate that goeth to Preneste. Beyond those boundes they durst not be bold to be ouer busye, or to stray ouer farre. For yf they aduētured ouer farre from theyr Campe, they lightly ranne in daunger of commynge short home, they could not stirre any great way onlesse they went in greate companyes. By meanes whereof it came to passe, that men myght at all tymes goe and come saufely by the waye of Appius and the way of Ostia. The Romaines th [...]refore sent forthe their wyues and children and all their other people that were vnm [...]ete for the warres. Wherof somme abode in Campanie, some at Naples and some in St [...]ill as eue ry man thought most for hys commoditye and behoofe. At Rome Belisarius gaue streyghte commaundemente and looked narrowlye to it, that the Belisarius deuideth corne by the pole. corne was deuyded by the poll, to the entent y • no waste nor spoyle should be made of it. The same time Belisarius [Page 41] bannished the town Liberius the pope A pope banished vpō suspition of t [...]- son. vppon suspicion of secrete conspiratie with the Gothes. And anone after was Uigilius consecrated high bishop and enstalled in his steed. Other of the nobilitie of Rome also were bannished vppon lyke presumption, of the which number was one Maximus, whose great graundfather after the death of Ualentinian had vsurped the name and dignitie of the Empyre.
The. xij. Chapter.
The ayde that the Emperour sent into Ital [...] commeth to Rome, Belisarius after practising his souldiers in skyrmishes, encountereth with the Gothes in a mayne batt [...]ll, and is ouercome with great slaughter.
WHyle these thynges were a doing, Martine & Ualerian (whom New [...] commeth to Rome. Iustinian had sent forth as I shewed before) came vnto Rome, bringing with them a thousand & sixe hundred horsemen, the which for the most [Page] parte with all Hunnes. Belisarius beynge recomforted by the commynge of these Souldyers, determined to order hys warres after another sort then he had done before. For he was not mynded to stand styl with in the Citye kepynge of the walles, but euery daye sent out hys lyght horse Belis. practis [...]th his Souldyers in Sky [...] misshes. men and skirmyshed wyth hys enemyes in open fyelde. By meanes whereof it came to passe, that bothe partes were wonderfullye enflamed, and nothynge was lefte vnattempted. For Belisarius beynge a most expert captaine in feats of armes, taught his horsmen what they should do, shewing them how farre they shuld go, & where and when they should stay. One while he sent out his horsmen sodainly at the gates Salaria and Pinciana, and disquietted the Gothes that encamped theraboutes. Another while he would yssue oute at Aurelius gate and be doyng wyth the Gothes that lay betwen Adrians tumbe & the bridge Miluius. [Page 42] In these conflictes the souldiers of Be lisarius beganne to preualle. Not that they were able to match the whole power of theyr enemyes horsemen, but because they seemed to be to good for them being equally matched as many to as many, or some what mo in number then they them selues were, and to be of more conning and audacitie in their feighting. His horsemen being thus by litle and litle practised, began to set lyght by the horsemen of theyr enemies. And the besieged beganne to take courage and confidence vnto them. To be short, it came to that point, that they would not any more [...], but feight it out in the play [...]e held wyth hand strokes.
For the Captaynes and the Souldyers had lyen so sore at Belisarius, and had so often and so earnestly entreated hym, that he determined to A battell betwene the Go thes and Belisarius. trye some greater encounter.
[Page]And therevpon he disposed his armye in this wyse. First he commaunded one band to issue out at the gate of Aurelius and to stand in battell raye before Adrianus tumbe against theyr enemies. The charge of this bande he commited to Ualentine Lieutenant of the horsemen, geuing him besides his horsemen a certayne of the olde expert footemen, and of the peopl [...] of Rome, which of their own fre wyll requested the thyng at his hand. He wold not haue these footemen stand with the horsemen, but willed them to take the hilles which rise ouer the playnes on the left hand of Ianiculum. And he gaue Ualentine commaundement t [...] make a shewe as though he woulde euer geue an onset vppon the enemye, but in anye wyse not to encounter with them vnlesse he were compelled. For hys mynde was no moore but to deteyne that parte of the Gothes that encamped in that place, styll there, to the entent they shoulde not succour [Page 43] theyr felowes at the gate Salaria where he determined to feyght. Then made he two other battels, one at the gate Saleria, and another at the gate Pinciana. And in them both he placed the horsemen in the forewarde, and the footemen in the rereward, commaundynge eche battell to issue out at theyr seuerall gates and to marche toward theyr enemies. Uitigis kynge of the Gothes hauyng intelligence by certayne runnagates that he shoulde haue battell the nexte morowe, caused the Gothes to arme them selues by the breake of the daye. In orderyng of hys battelles, he set hys footemen in the middes, and on eche syde of them hys horsemen, as it were in wynges. In thys order he proceded agaynst Belisarius and gaue hym battell. The Souldyers on bothe sydes encountered together very fyercely. And the Captaynes folowynge after them, Belisarius on the one syde and Uitigis on the other, encouraged [Page] their parties. At the beginning of the battell, the Souldiers of Belisarius were farre to strong for their enemies, and many of the Gothes were slaine. The battell was foughte harde by their campe, by meanes whereof the Gothes abounding in multitude, sent euer freshe and freshe in steed of them that were ouerthrowen. In this sorte the conflict lasted vntyll it was noone, neyther partye gettynge aduantage of other. Howbeit the Souldyers of Belisarius foughte more cherefullye. The Gothes helde it out onely with sufferaunce. In the meane tyme the battell that stood at the Sepulchre of Adrian, encountred with theyr enemies. For the people of Rome descendynge from the hylles gaue charge vppon the Gothes.
And Ualentine perceyuynge hys people entangled wyth theyr enemyes, marched forewarde wyth the Hoste whereof he was Captayne, from the [...] of Adrian, and assayled hys [Page 44] [...] also. By reason whereof the Gothes were not able to endure long against them, in especiallye foras muche as they were abasshed at the great number that came downe from the hylles, so that beyng not able to recouer agayne to theyr Campe, they were fayne to flye further of. Nowe, the Romaynes that came from the hygher groundes fell by and by to ryflynge of theyr enemyes Tentes. By meanes whereof neyther they them selues pursued theyr It is yll fishing before the [...]. enemyes, nor yet the Souldyers, but suffered them to goe where they woulde. For the Souldyers perceyuynge them to fall to ryflynge, to the [...]ntente they woulde not lose theyr parte of the Praye, lefte the pursute of theyr enemyes, and retourned to spoyle theyr Tentes also. And so the Gothes being let slip, when they [Page] sawe that no body folowed after them stayed in the next mountaynes. From thence beholdyng theyr tentes to be pulled downe and caryed away, when they perceyued howe theyr enemyes kept neyther any order nor warrelyke discipline, they encouraged one another and gaue a newe charge vppon them. Whome (by reason they were laden and skattered in gatherynge of the spoyle) they easly ouercame, and so both saued theyr tentes and also recouered theyr pray. By that tyme Fortune beganne to chaunge her copie aboute the kinges campe also. For the Gothishe footemen resorting in great number out of the nexte campe, cast them selues vppon Belisarius horsemen, and keueryng them selues wyth theyr shieldes in maner of a vaulte, preased so sore vppon the forefront of theyr battell, that they compelled them to lose grounde. The whyche thynge when theyr horsemen that stoode on the ryght wynge perceyued, [Page 45] they also assayled Belisarius horsemen on the syde. Who beynge not able to abyde the brunte and force of Belis. and hys men put to fleyght. them any long tyme, at length retyred to the mayne battell of theyr footemen. The which beyng not of strength sufficient to withstande the violence of the enemye, was with great slaughter lykewyse put to flyght. Howe be it, there were two Peticaptaynes named Principius and Taruunt, whose manhode and audacitie was well approued in that place to theyr great com The valiauntnes of Principius and Taruunt. mendation and immortall fame. For at suche tyme as all the reste fled, they two kepyng theyr standings, put them selues against the whole power of the Gothes, and kepte them occupyed, to thentent that theyr companye mighte haue space to recouer the citie, so long vntyll Principius beynge pitifullys mangled all hys body ouer, after long feyghtyng fell downe, and aboute hym two and fourtye of hys retinewe: and Taruuntes being of lyke valiantnes [Page] and courage, when he had lost much blood at hys woundes, and that hys strength beganne to fayle, was caried out of y e battel to the Pincian gate by hys brother whether he woulde or no, and there fell downe dead.
After whose departure the Souldyers ranne ful flyght toward the Citie. The Romaines standing vppon the The peryll of thē that were ouercome. walles dyd shut y e gates against them, for feare least their enemies should haue entered in with them. by meanes whereof agreat forte of the souldyers were shutte out who getting ouer the Uaumure, stood with their backes to the wales and their faces toward their enemies, hauyng no way to saue their lyues but one, which was to be defended by them that stood vppon the walles. For the most part of them hauing eyther broken their wapons in the battell, or [...]lls throwen them a way in the chace, had not wher with to defend them selues Howbeit those that were vppon the battelmentes defended [Page 46] them wyth stones. Thys battell being begonne at the Campe of the Gothes at the laste ended harde at the gates and walles of the Towne. There were s [...]ayne of Belisarius men a great number, and those of the valiantest and best practised.
¶ The. xiii. Chapter.
❧ Of dyuers skyrmishes duringe the continuaunce of the syege, the Gothes enuiron the Citye wyth another Campe wherevppon groweth scarcetye, and anone after enseweth the plague. Belisarius by hys pollicye caused scarcetye in the Gothyshe campe likewyse, into the whiche the plague spredeth it selfe also.
[Page]AFter this battell Belisarius absteyned certayne dayes from feyghtyng, The syndged child dreadeth [...]yer. and was content to defend the walles onely. At the length, when he had well hartened hys souldiers, he beganne to lead them forth againe. But he durst not any more encounter with his whole power. Only he perseuered to make lighte skyrmisshes as he had benn wont to do before. Of the which some were very notable specially suche as were agaynst those Gothes that encamped on the hyther syde of the bridge Miluius ouer against the gate of Aurelius. For in the same Skyrmisshes aboute the bridge Milui [...]. place is a plaine grounde very fytte for horsemen to skyrmisshe in, and in the same playne standeth a theatre buylded in olde tyme for maisters of fence to playe at weapons in. Aboute the same theatre were many whote skyrmisshes. Because that eyther the souldiers of Belisarius dyd take and vse it for a campe, or elles the Gothes prenentynge them layed ambusshes in [Page 47] the same. Moreouer, both at the gate Salaria, and the gate Pinciana, daye by daye was skyrmishyng, almost euerye daye. The Gothes therefore consideryng howe the siege was lyke to continew longe, thoughte there was no hope of wynnyng of the Citie anye other waye then by famin. For albeit that the taking awai of y e hauen might seeme to haue bene a great anoyance: yet not withstandyng (as mans witte is imaginatiue specially in extremitie) the hoyes and such other shippes of bur then as were wont to arriue at Portna, Aduersitie [...] keth men wyse. arriued at Autium, and there vnloding their corne and other necessaries sent them from thence to Rome by land. The Gothes therefore desyrous to cutte of this commoditie from the Romains also, pytched the eyght Campe aboute the Citie betwene the waye that leadeth into Latium, and the waye of Appius. For there are in the same place two conduytes, the [...] crossyng eche other doe stretch [Page] as it were into two armes, and leauyng a certayne space betwixte them do mete a gayne a good waye of. They are from the Citie aboute fyue myles. The grounde betwene the sayde armes the Gothes tooke and enclosed with a Wall of stone layed with lome. And so by that meanes they hadde a strong and well fortified campe, wherin they placed seuen thousande horsemen, who infestyng bothe the vpper coast and the neather coast, stopped vp The great peril that Rome stood in. the way into Latium, the waye of Appius, and the waye to Ostia cuttynge of all libertie of conueying in of corne. Through this, they that were besieged stood in worse case then euer they dyd, and it was none other lyke but that Rome shoulde be famished. Yet not wythstandynge as longe as there was corne in the fieldes, the Souldyers woulde steale out of the towne in the night tyme, and fetch in corne, the which they solde very dere to the Citizens, and so relieued the necessitie for a [Page 48] whyle. But when that this shift once fayled, then all thyngs laye in vtter despayre. Nowe was the Sunne at the highest and the dayes at the longest, and the plage beganne to raigne in the A plage. towne, so that diuers dyed, not only of the common people, but also of Belisaris Souldiers. They were brought to a great di [...]resse, and to a sor [...] afterdeale, and therefore the Romaines resortyng to Belisarius, bewayled theyr heauie misfortune, in that they A pitous com playnt. had brought them selues to such extremitie by [...] theyr fayth and allegeans [...] the Emperoure vppon hys promis [...]. For theyr Citizens had bene miserablye murdered at Rauenna by their enemie, their citie dish [...] norably [...] by y • Gothes, all thinges without y • walls wasted & spoiled, & within the walls oppressed with intollerable famin & penurie of all things. Wherefore they besoughte hym to leade them forth against theyr enemy, for it were better for them to dye lyke [Page] men wit [...] their weapons in their hāds then to pine away for hunger and to abyde so great and so dishonorable calamities. When Belisarius heard them make their mone in this sorte, he gaue them scarce so gentle aunswere as the A rough answere. case required. He saide they were missaduised and ledde by rasshenes accordyng to the nature of common people, whyche are wonte to be ledde by rage rather then ruled by reasō. They knewe well ynough that he was wont to be alwayes ruled by Counsell and to doe hys matters by discretion, and not by wylfullnes. He looked for an armye of men from the Emperour, the whyche beynge ones come, yf they were then so willynge to feyghte as they made themselues to be, he might be able to warrant them victory wyth oute fayle. The sayd armie did bring wyth theym an infinite deale of corne and therefore he wylled theym to departe and to lette theym alone wyth the order of the warres.
[Page 49]The Romaines with these words eyther the wise pratise and pollicie of Belisarius. recomforted or rather put in feare he beganne to imagin and deuise with himselfe, by what meanes he myghte bring scarcenesse of corne amonge the Gothes. For the performance wherof he practised this pollicie. He sent Constantin and Traiane with a thousand horsmen vnto Taracine, and Martine and Seuthis with [...]yue hundred vnto Tibur: and he placed another bande at Alba. Unto all these he gaue commaū dement that to the vttermoste of their power they shuld stoppe all victuallers from the Gothishe Campe, and helpe to [...] them that were willing to goe to Rome. And to thentent that the Campe which laye at the Conduyt should not anoy them, he caused a bulwarke to be fortified at the church of s. Paule, and appointed a troope of horse men toward in the same place, to thentent to defend the wayes (as farre as they could) from thinuasions of y • Gothes. Reuerēs ha [...] to religion. The church of S. Paule is w tout [Page] the gat [...] toward Ostia, quite & cleane another way from the church of S. P [...] ter, both of theym standyng wythout the towne and eche of them hauinge a porch from the gate of the Citie to the Church. These two temples of the Apostles The Gothes in all the tyme of their [...]ge did neuer violate. The priestes contynuinge in them dyd their deuine seruice fréely wythoute interruption or trouble, as they had bene accustomed to doe in foretymes. Constantine and Traiane therfore goyng to Taracine, when they had broughte Antonia the wyfe of Belisarius at [...] the [...] of Beli [...] Naples and there lefte her, retourned backe agayne and spoyled all the townes in those quarters, whyche ministred rely [...]e and succour to the Gothes, and wythin shorts space they broughte to passe, that nothing at al was conueyed to the Gothes out of those places. Martine and Senthis also goyng to Tibur when they had [...] paired the walles of that towne which [Page 50] were decayed, dyd dayly molest and disquiet the Gothes out of that place. By some meanes or other, & wold not suffer anye graine to be caried to theyr [...]ampe, The same thing did thei in like wise y • were sent to Alba. By meanes Scarcetie and pestilence in the Gothishe Campe. whereof w tin very short space, it came to passe y t the Gothes which were y e besyegers, were put to as much distresse as they that were besyeged. And besides the scarcetye of corne, the pestilence also had sprede it selfe into the campe of the Gothes.
¶ The. xiiii. Chapter.
¶ A new suppliment of souldiers commeth from themp [...]ur, for the saufe conuey wherof vnto Rome Belisarius pollitique ly prouideth to the great slaughter of the Gothes, who thervpon enter in communication of peace, so that a truce is taken whiles Ambassadours may go and come from themperour to whom the determi natiō of all their cōtrouersies is referred.
[Page]WHile these things were in doing, A newe supplement of souldiers. Iustiniā sent another hoste of mē into Italy. They were of Thracian hor [...]en eight hundred, of whom Iohn the sonne of his brother Uitalian had the leadinge: and a thousand and three hundred mustered in other places, vnder the conducte of Alexander Marcent and Zeno. Moreouer three thousand footemen which came by wa ter ledde by Paule and Conon. Also there were at Naples fyue hundred footenien prepared by Procopius of Cesarea. All these bandes assemblyng themselues together, determyned to goe to Rome, they brought with them great plenty and store of vi [...]uals. The horsmen marched by the sea coast, and the footemen were conueyed by water. In the same flete was broughte great abundaunce of corne, and much corne was also caryed by land in wagons. Belisarius hau [...]g knowledge of theyr commynge, for feare leaste the A [...] pol [...]cye. Gothes should meete wyth them and [Page 51] interrupt them, inuented this polli [...]. He commaunded the gate of Flaminius (whyche he had dammed vp from the begynnyng of the syege,) to be opened in the nyght tyme and the bagage taken away wherewythall it was stop ped. The whych beyng done he sent certayne of hys souldyers thyther the nexte mornynge by the breake of the daye ready harnessed and well appointed, byddyng them putte themselues in araye and so kepe them close wythoute noyse. Then he sent Traiane and Diogenes wyth a thousand horsemen oute at the Pincian gate, commaundynge theym to runne to the campe of theyr enemies with as much noyse as they coulde, and when their enemyes were yssued out vpon them, to retyre backe agayne, and not to staye before they came to the Gate where they went forthe. These thinbeynge in all poyn [...]es thus accomplished, whyles they were feyghtynge at the Pincian Gate, Belisarius [Page] [...]odainly issuyng out at the gate of Fla minius with the reste of hys armye, made strayght to the campe of the Gothes, where he founde all thynges vnprouided and in maner emptye on that syde, as they that mistrusted no harme at all from the gate of Flaminius, because that it had bene longe closed vp. a great [...]augh [...] of the Gorhes. So that it wanted lytle but that [...] had wonne their Campe, Then tourning hym selfe towarde the Pincian gate, & there gettyng his enemyes in the middes betwene his two hoosts, he by assayling them on the backes, and those that were fledde, by retournyng fiersly vppon them before, strake them with an incredible slaughter. And vppon thys Battell there fell suche a terrible feare amonge them, that they doubled theyr watche in their Campe, and tooke care for nothynge so much, as howe to defende themselues from the pollicies of Belisarius, The enemye beynge by this [Page 52] meanes troubled and putte in feare, the Emperours armye without anye Commu [...] of peace let came vnto Ostia. The Gothes therefore beynge weryed and vexed with many displeasures, and besydes that, vnderstandynge howe a freshe crewe of Souldyers were come to the [...]yde of Belisarius, began to consulte of breaking vp theyr siege. For by that tyme a great part of theyr campe was dimished eyther by the plage or elles by the sworde, and many had bene fayne to forsake the Campe, eyther for theyr woundes or elles for that they were sicke. Uitigis therefore sendyng Commissioners vnto Rome (after that many thynges had bene alledged, and aunswered on bothe sydes to and fro, as concernynge the equity [...] of theyr case,) at length agreed to referre the determination of theyr controuersyes to the Emperour Iustinian, and he to decide the matter as [...]e should thinke good.
[Page]Herevppon Ambassadours were sent Truce taken for a tyme. to hym, and a truce taken for thre monethes vntyll they myghte returne againe, and for the better obseruynge of the truce, and performaunce of couenauntes, pledges were geuen and taken one both sydes. When thinges were thus seta at staye, the army and victualls that were me [...] at Ostia, came to Rome bothe by lande and by water.
The second booke of Lenard Aretine, concernyng the warres in Italy against the Gothes.
❧ The first Chapter.
¶ There riseth occasion of g [...]udge betwene the Gothes and the Imperialls which groweth to altercation, so that in the end the truce is broken. Datius Bishop of Millaine enformeth Belisarius of the good wills of the Millainers towards the Emperour and is remised with great thankes. Belisarius is put in daunger of his lyfe by one of his Pe [...]captaines, whom he would [...] haue punnished for his misbehauiour the Gothes going about to steale the Citie and to winne it by treason are twise detected.
WHyles thynges stoode thus at a staie, and that the warres ceased by reason of the truce that was takē, (Belisarius yet neuertheles in the [Page] meane time kepinge Rome, and the Gothes their Campe and bastiles) sodaynly there fortuned complaints and altercation for breakynge of the truce Causes of altercation. contrarie to promise, vpon thys occasion. There was (as I told you before) a garrison of Gothes at the Citie Portua. Now the souldyers of the said garrison, when victualls fayled them, forsoke the towne. They were not so sone gonne out of it, but y • Pa [...]le Captaine of the Isauriens, remayning with the nauy [...] at [...], entered into it. And wythin a whyle after, the souldyers of Belisarius receyued another Cyty in Tuskye nere vnto the sea syde called Centumcelles beynge lykewyse lefte vppe by the Gothes. Moreouer the Gothes abandoned vppe the Citye Alba amonge the marses after the same sorte, and the souldyers of Belisarius tooke it. When Uitigis knewe that hys enemyes had taken those Cities, he sent commissioners to Rome, to complayne of violatyng [Page 54] the Truce contrarye to the articles of agreement▪ In that Portua, Centumcelles, and Alba townes of the Gothes, contrarye to all equitye and conscience, were taken from them for the Gothes had not geuen theym vppe, but suche as were there in garryson were comme to hym at hys commaundement, and should haue shortlye retourned into the same agayn that whych they did they thought they myghte the freelyer haue done it by reason of the Truce. And therefore of reason, restitution oughte to be mad [...]. Belisarius made aunswere to the commissioners in this wyse. Returne (ꝙ he) to the Kynge your Mast [...]r, and tell hym that as for those thin ges that he alledgeth as concernynge the callynge of hys garrysons from theyr charges, to send them thyther agayne, are but feyned matters. For it was easye to be s [...]ne for what consyderation the Gothes forsooke those Cytyes.
[Page]He confessed that it was not lawful for him by the truce, to take them perforce or to steale thē, but to enter vpon such as had no owners, nor anye bodye to keepe possession, that he sayd was not forbidden. Uppon this matter rose preuye grudge and hartburnyng, the Gothes sekynge meanes to requite Belisarius wyth the lyke. For those thre cities being taken, did Belisarius great pleasure and seruice for the warres. Wynter drew on a pace. And Belisarius hauing men of warre good store, determined to send forth his horsmen to winter in the country. Whervppon besides those that went into other places. He sent MM. into the Country of the Picents. Ouer whō he made captaine Iohn Uitalian geuinge him instructions what he would haue hym to do. There were in the same countrye the wiues and children of the Gothes, for the husbāds & fathers were al come to the siege of Rome as many as were able to beare armour. If the truce continued, [Page 55] he had he shuld not stirre, but yf the Gothes should happen to worke anye thynge contrarye to the articles of the Truce, then he wylled hym to make hauocke and spoyle, and to take as manye townes as he could. If any towne made resistens he commaunded hym to besyege it, and not to passe from it vntyll he had wonne it. For he thoughte it shoulde not be for hys ease to proceede onward, and leaue the Townes of hys enemyes behynde hym. Wyth these wordes and instructions Belisariaus sent Iohn amonge the Picentes wyth an armye. The verye same tyme Datius Byshoppe Datius bisshoppe of Millaine. of Myllaine, and wyth hym certayne of the heade Cityzens came to Belisarius declarynge vnto hym, that the Cytye of Myllame shoulde be at the Emperours commaundement, yf he woulde send neuer so slender a garryson thyther. For they were of power suffycient of theymselues to dryue the Gothes not onely out of Myllaine, [Page] but also oute of all Lumbardye, yf so be it that the Emperour woulde but onely beare the name of it. Belisarius entertaynynge theym turtuously, and geuyng theym moste harty thankes wyth gentle and honorable words wylled theym to putte no doubte in the matter, affyrmynge that when A soday ne daunger. tyme serued he woulde fullfyll theyr requestes. Duringe thys tyme that all thynges thus prospered and followed theyr desyres, there happened an horrible daunger, the whyche in one moment had almoste tourned all thynges vppe syde downe. There was one Presidius a citizen of Rome who beynge wont to dwell at Rauenna, in the begynnyng of thys warre stale awaye from thence, and came to Rome. In hys iourney the souldyers of Constantyne whiche laye at Spolet, had taken from hym a sword curiouslye wroughte and costlye vernyshed. The man beynge robbed and [Page 56] takynge the dyspleasure in yll parte, had made complaint thereof to Belisarius wyth request to haue hys good restored again. And Belisarius had ge uen commaundement that it shoulde be so. But by meanes of the warre and of the syege whyche afterwarde ensewed, the souldyers beynge otherwyse occupyed and the Captayne [...] aboute weightier matters, the thynge was delayed. At the length in thys tyme (as I sayde) whyles all thynges were in ioyfull estate, as Belisarius rodde through the towne. Presidius caughte hys Horse by the brydle, and wyth a lowd and complaynynge voyce, in the audyence of a greate number, asked hym yf it were meete that a Cytyzen of Rome (who abandonynge all that euer he had to the enemy had fled away naked) shuld also be robbed by his souldiers of that little y • he had caryed away w t him, and be thus wrongfully [Page] and iniurlously dealt withall. He sayd he had oftentymes putte vp hys complaynt vnto him of the wrong and violence that had bene offered, and coulde haue no redresse, and yet they that had robbed hym, had hys good wythin the Cyty, and dyd weare it daylye before hys face. These wordes dyd styrre the pacience of Belisarius verye sore.
And therfore assoone as he came home he caused Constantine to be called before hym (for they were his souldiers that had taken awaye the sworde) and gaue hym a great rebuke for neglectyng of his commaundement so oftentymes in delyuerynge of the sworde. Marry (ꝙ Constantine) I wyll rather throwe it into the Tyber, then I wyll restore it to that Uarlet. This was very lewdly and presumptuously answered. Then sayde Belisarius vnto him, art not thou vnder me? Yes sayd he, for as much as it is the Emperours plea [...]ure. But yet for all that, in this one thyng I wyll neuer be ruled by you [Page 57] whyles I lyue. When Belisarius hard hym saye so, he was more angrye with hym then before, and called for the Serieauntes. Constantine knowing that it should be to his coste that the Serieauntes were sent for, drewe out his Dagger that hung at his thigh and lyke a Bedlem runnyng at Belisarius, and dabbed hym in a lytle beneath the stomacke. Out of dout yf such as stood by, had not spedely stept vnto him, and wronge the Dagger out of hys hande, and delyuered hym to the officers, Belisarius had surely died for it, and hys death had drawen all things with it to vtter ruine, & the Gothes had the same day bene made lords of all. But God of hys infinite goodnes woulde not suffer so great a mischaunce to happen. And after at the commaundement of Belisarius, Constantine was put to death. Within a whyle after, the Gothes attempted to Treason twise detected. haue taken Rome by stealth, first by a way that they founde out in one of the [Page] channells of the conduites in the night tyme, and afterwarde by stealing ouer the ryuer in botes nere vnto the fielde of Mars. But they missed of their purpose in both places. For in the channel theyr owne lyghts bewrayed theyr couert workyng, by meanes whereof the channell was stopped, & they enclosed from gettyng out. And at the field of Mars their treason was detected, & so their attempt was made frustrat. The treason was deuised in this wise. Two rascall [...]arletts that dwelte by S. Peters churche (the Gothes as is shewed before, neuer offered harme or displeasure to that place, but in honour of thapostle preserued bothe the buyldynges therof and those that dwelled in them vnhurt) had secret cōference w t Uitigis of betraying y e citie. And to bring theyr purpose to effect, they deuised this policie. Beneath the field of Mars in one place, the walles were verye weake & sore decayed for lacke of looking to, by reasō (as I think) thei y • had ben before [Page 58] tymes, trusted altogether tō the defens of the Ryuer. Uitigis therfore caused lyghters & barges and al [...] kind of botes to be put in a readinesse at the brydge Miluius. For had he once set any con uenient number of hys souldiers, ouer on thother side of the ryuer, he thought it would be an easie matter, after the landing of the first, to conuey ouer still mo and mo in the same vesselles. He douted nothing so muche as that the watchmen that warded on that side should escrie hym and bewray his deuise. For the auoyding of which dout, he corrupted the two Romaines for a piece of money, to further thys attempt. To whome he delyuered a sleping pouder willing them to geue it the watchmen with wine, to thentent that when they had dronke the same, they might fall into a dead slepe. After these conueances were thus deuised, & agreed vppon, the one of them beyng stryken with repentance, disclosed the whole matter to Belisarius, and [Page] there vppon the other beynge taken with the slepie medicine aboute hym, that the Kynge hadde geuen hym, was put to the torture and compelled to vtter all the order of the matter.
The whiche done, Belisarius caused his nose and eares to be cut of, and settyng hym vppon an Asse, sent hym out at the Pincian gate to the Gothish Campe, to the entent that Uitigis might perceiue how that his close workyng was detected, and his secret practises browght to lyght.
❧ The. ij. Chapter.
¶ Vpon the discouerrie of the treason the truce ce [...]th▪ Iohn Vitalian vvynneth di [...] tovvnes from the Gothes. and amongest other Arminine, vppon the takinge wherof they breake vp their si [...]ge before [...]ome.
WHen Belisarius had so openly discouered The truce bro ken betwene the Gothes & B [...]rius. these their craftie packinges, he thought it not mete to obserue the truce any lenger w t them. [Page 59] Whervppon he wrate to John that he shoulde execute his commission. He with his two thousand horsemen scouring the coūtrey of y e Picents through, tooke the wyues and children of the Gothes prisoners, and forraged & spoyled all the whole countrey from the one ende to the other. Moreouer encounteryng with Uglitheus vncle of Uitigis by the fathers syde, cōming against him with an armye of the Gothes, [...] vanquished him and slew the captaine himself w t a great part of his hoste, & so lyke a cōqueror ranged ouer al y • whole countrey. When he had wonne many townes & that he was about to bes [...]ege Auxiuū, it was not vnknowen vnto him what a slender garrison was with in the town, but yet the place was of it self very strong & defensible. And therefore thinkyng it folly to spend the tyme in vayne aboute the besieging thereof, he kept on hys iourney forwarde. The same opinion also had he of the b [...]sieging of Urbine. For the citie being [Page] wel fortified & strong of it self, semed of necessitie to aske a long time in y e s [...]ge therof, & he had put al his hope in spedie celeritie. He tooke Fauum & Pisaurū, and then brought his army against Arimine in hope to get it, because he had heard saye that the men of Arimine could not well agree with the Gothes. When he had ones brought his hoste to this towne, he cast such a terrour vp pon the Gothes thereby, that thei durst not abyde thereaboutes, but remoued vnto Rauenna, and the townesmen set open their gates to let him in. By this meanes John toke Arimine, leauing behinde two stronge cities manned by the Gothes, namely Auximum and Urbinc. All the which doinges were cleane contrarys to Belisarius commaundements. Howbeit he thought it better to be sure of Arimine, then to spende hys tyme vaynly in lying styll aboute Auximum and Urbine.
Wherevnto he was the rather persuaded, [Page 60] because that Arimine a towné so nere neyghbour vnto Rauenna being taken, it was not lykelye that the Gothes would tary any long tyme after at the siege of Rome, but rather make hast to come away to the defence of Raue [...]na, and the places thereaboutes. The which thing came so to passe in dede. For as soone as the Gothes vnderstood that Ariminc was taken, they determined to breake vp their siege before Rome, and to depart thence. Uitigis therefore within a few dayes after set fier on his tentes, and The Gothes break vp their s [...]ge before [...]ome. with all the whole power of the Gothes, dislodged. In his retyring he suffered great losse. For when the one halfe of hys armye was passed the bridge, Belisarius commaunded hys men to set vppon them that were behynde, amonge whome he made suche a slaughter, that a greate number of theym that escaped hys handes, for haste in gettynge [Page] ouer the bridge were throwen downe on both sides and drowned. This siege of the citie of Rome endured a whole yere and nyne dayes, taking his beginning about the. xiiij. or. xv. daye of March. Nowe I wyll pursue the actes of eyther partes, and what prouision was made on both sides after the breaking vp of the siege.
The. iii. Chapter.
¶Vitigis besieginge Arimine is by the diligence and industrie of Iohn disapoynted of an assault that he determined to haue geuen to the towne, and repulsed with great losse.
VItigis albeit he made speede toward Rauenna, yet not withstanding he coueted to kepe the cities of Hetruria and of other Prouinces in theyr accustomed obedience. And therfore he placed at Clasium a thousande horsemen, as manye at Urbiuetus, fyue hundred at Tudert, foure thousande [Page 61] at Auxiuum, at Urbine. ij. thousande, fyue hundred at Cesena, and as Vitigis goeth to besege Arimine. many at Mountferrat. And he hymselfe with the rest of his armie went to besiege Arimine. Belisarius after the departure of the Gothes, commaunded Martine and Ildiger with a thousande horsemen to make hast to Arimine, & to bryng John & his horsemen that were with him from thence, placing fotemen there in their steds. The whiche thinge he did to the entent he woulde not haue that bande (wherein were the best horsemen of the hoste) besieged by the enemie. For if so be it that Arimine were manned with fote men, he thoughte that the Gothes would not bestowe theyr labour in besieging of it. And if they shoulde besiege it, he thought the footemen shuld be better able to endure out the siege then horsemen, for as muche as it is a difficulte matter to keepe horses in a siege, and footemen might easly be conueyed to Arimine at all tymes [Page] by water from Aucon, whiche newly before had yelded it selfe vnto him. Herevppon [...] and martine forslowing no time, dyd [...] a wyndlasse farre from theyr enemyes and came vnto Arimine. For the Gothes by reason of the huge multitude of their armye, were compelled to take more leysure in their iourney, wheras the other beynge lyght harnessed, out went theym a greate waye. When they were come to Arimine and had declared the mynde and commaundement of [...], John would ney The [...] nesse of Iohn [...]. ther obey hymselfe, nor yet suffer hys cosyn Damian wyth hys horsemen whyche were aboute foure hundred, to be ruled by theym. And therefore [...] and Martine departynge from Arimine, ledde awaye wyth theym all the horsemen that Belisarius had delyuered vnto Iohn at hys settynge forthe, leauynge behynde theym none but the footemen and those horsemen that [Page 62] Iohn and Damian had of their owne. Immediatlye herevppon Uitigis came and besyeged the Towne. At hys fyrste commynge thyther, he framed a towre of lyke heyghth wyth the walles, the [...] was not drawen wyth Oxen as the other was before at Rome, but dryuen by souldyers that were wythin the engyne. The Gothes therefore sette the same agaynste that parte of the wall, where they myghte wyth [...] ease approche, entendynge the nexte daye to haue wonne the Towne by assaulte. But Iohn the same nyghte The diligence and industrie of Iohn in pre uentyng the purpose of his enemies. went oute wyth hys souldyers, and caused theym to cutte a broode and a deepe Dyche on that syde castyng vppe all the earthe that came oute of it on that browe of the Dyche that was nexte the wall. And so one nyghtes worke disappoynted the longe prepensed labour of the enemye, cuttynge of all possibilitye of bryngynge the engyne to the wall. [Page] Yet for all that Uitigis was mynded to fyll vp the dythe, commaundyng all hys armye to prepare Fagotts and strawe wyth suche other baggage for the same purpose. And to the entent the towre shoulde not the night followyng be set on fyer by the enemie, he determined to drawe it backe agayne to the Campe. As the Gothes were aboute it, Iohn issued out with hys souldyers, and set vppon them beyng busye about the worke. There was a great and cruell combate aboute the Turret, and manye of the Gothes were slayne. Howe be it, after longe feyghtyng they drewe it backe agayne oute of daunger, but wyth suche a [...] and so greate losse of theyr best men of warre, that they [...] vtterlye in despayre of wynnynge the towne by force, determinyng to subdue it by [...].
¶The iiij. Chapter.
[...] Belisarius seudeth Mundilas with a po [...] to receiue Millaine, who in [...] at the Citye of Pauie by a mis [...] loseth a noble man of hys companye called Fidelis. [...] and [...] other Cityes of Lombardye yelde vnto Mundilas. Vraias the [...] of Vitigis goeth into Lumbardye agaynste the Imperialles. Be [...] [...] dyuers townes in Italye by composition. Vitigis sendeth a [...] of souldyers to Auxiuum for the more strengthenynge thereof▪ the vvhych makyng a rode [...] the inhabiters of Aucon, throughe the follye of [...] Cap [...] thereof make a greater slaughter and put the towne in daunger of takynge.
THe verye selfe same tyme, Be [...] graunted an ayde of souldyers to the Ambassadours of Millain that came before vnto Rome. He appoynted Mundilas one of hys [...] a verye stoute and [Page] valiant man to b [...] chieftaine of the said armie. In the same band was also Fidelis of Millaine whome we declared to haue bene Stewarde of the kynges house. All these being conu [...]yed to Geane by shippe, went from thence to Millaine on foote. And to thentent they woulde not be hyndered of theyr passage ouer Po, they caryed Bots with them in Wagons, to ferrie ouer the ryuer withall. Marching therefore in this sort as I haue told [...], when they had passed ouer the ryuer Po, and were come to the Citie Ticiuum which is nowe called Pauie, the Gothes issued out of the towne and set vppon them. For by reason that towne had a strong castle in it, the Gothes had bestowed manye and precious thynges in the same, and had manned it wyth a great garrison. The skyrmy [...]he was no sooner foughte, but that the Gothes were dryuen into the Cytye.
And so Mundilas passed wyth hys armye ouer the bridge that was harde [Page 64] by the town. In the same place was Fi delis of Millain slaine. For he wēt into a certaine church to make his prayers, and the residue of hys company beyng all gone, last of all he came out alone, & as he wold haue taken hys horseback, he ouerthrewe. The whiche thyng hys enemyes that stood vppon the Walle perceyuyng, rus [...]hed our vppon hy [...] [...]he death of Fidelis of Mil laine. and slew hym, before that▪ Mundilas and the souldyers wyste of it.
The deathe of thys man was great sorowe bothe to the Captaine and to the souldyers. For he was a noble man in hys countrey, and of muche power, and such a one as wyth his presence might greatly haue furthered the warre that was in hand. Mundilas therefore and the reste of his companye keepynge on theyr iourney towarde Millaine and other cities of Lumbardy be come Imperial Millaine, were receyued into the Citie. Therevppon, Come, Bergome, Nouaria, wyth the reste [Page] of the cities in those borders, folowing thensample of Millaine, of their owne accorde receyued Mundilas and hys souldyers. When Uitigis had knowledge of those thinges that had happened aboute Millaine, he sent Uraias hys brothers sonne with a great army into those costs, to thentent he should bothe cause such to keepe theyr allegians to the Gothes as had not yet reuolted, and also (yf he could) recouer such as had already yelded.
Furthermore, he wrate to Thewdeberte Kynge of Fraunce (wyth whome not long before he had entered in leage) desyring hym to minister ayde vnto Uraias. In thys state or rather in this expectation were the matters of Lumbardie. Belisarius at such tyme as corne began to wa [...] rype, setting out of Rome, marched wyth hys armye towarde hys enemyes. The Gothes that were left in garrison at Tudert and Cluse, hearing that Belisarius was makyng towarde theym [Page 65] for as muche as they thought themselues ouer weake to encounter agaynste hym, forthewyth sent messengers vnto hym and yelded vp theyr Townes by composition. Whyle these thynges were in doinge, Uitigis sent another armye vnto Auximum. For he was vtterlye determyned to reteyne and kéepe styll that Citye. Wyth thys armye he sent a newe deputye to haue the charge of the Towne and the men of warre, named Uacinius. Who adioining his newe souldyers and the olde crewe togyther, purposed to attempt the win nyng of Aucon hys nexte neyghbour citie, why [...] was manned wyth a garryson of Belisarius. And therevppon he went wyth all hys whole power agaynste the inhabiters of Aucon.
That Towne in those dayes was walled onclye on that syde, that stoode vppon. the hyll, the lower places situated on the playne grounde [Page] albeit they were replenished with buil dings, yet were they not enclosed with anye wall. Therefore at such time as the Gothes approched. [...] captain of the towne and souldyers of Aucon, fearing least the suburbes and the inhabiters thereof should be wasted and destroyed by thenemye, came downe from the vpper part of the towne with all his whole crewe, and set hymselfe The foole har dinesse of Conon. agaynste hys enemye. But in that case Conon was to farre ouermatched For he hauynge scarse a thousand souldiers, encountered with his enemies beynge foure thousand. And therefore he dyd quickely abye hys foolyshe hardynesse. For beynge [...]t able to stand agay [...]ste so manye he was at length [...]quished, an [...] [...]eynge put to flygh [...] loste the moste part [...] of hys men, and the Citie it selfe was with much a doe hardly saued from taking. For when the souldiers retyred full flyght toward the towne, the townesmen for doubte leaste their enemyes [Page 66] should enter in amonge the souldyers, fearefully closed vppe their gates. By meanes whereof there was a greate slaughter made of theym euen harde vnder the wall. And the Captayne Conon himselfe was driuen to so narrowe an erigent, that he had none other waye to saue hys lyfe, but to be drawen vppe the wall by a lyne. The Gothes rerynge vppe skalynge Ladders, endeuored to wynne the Cytye. Othersome settynge fyre on the houses that we spake of before, burnte vppe all that was wythoute the walles.
¶ The. v. Chapter.
¶ Narses an Eunuche the Emperours Chamberlaine commeth into Italy with a new power and meeteth with Belisarius about Aucon, where in consultinge what is to be done after diuers opinions of thother captaynes Narses perswadeth to goe and rescow Iohn Vatalian besieged in arimine the whych Belisarius ve [...]ye pollitiquelye bringeth to passe. Through flatterie and [Page] euill instigatio [...] [...]yseth emulation and dis corde betwene Narses and Belisarius Belisarius going with Narses to the siege of Vrbine is of him forsakē and yet through good fortune winneth the towne.
NOT longe after that these thinges The cōminge of Narses into Italy. were done at Aucon, Narses came into Italye w [...]th a newe hoste of men. Thys Narses was an Enuche, a man that stoode muche in the Emperours fauour, and one that bare greate rule and aucthoritie aboute hym, For no man myghte commaund in the Emperours court, but he onelye. Moreouer he was threasurer of the Empyre (whyche is the offyc [...] of greattest honour and truste) and one of hys priuye counsell, by w [...]ome the Emperour was in manner altogether ruled.
He broughte wyth hym into Italye fyue thousande souldyers. T [...]e notablest amonge whome, was Iustine, Captayne of the Illirien souldyers, & another, Narses a Persian [Page 67] borne. Also there were in his retinew MM. of Therules of whom were captaines Isandre and Phauotheus. In y • The meeting of Belisarius and Narses. meane tyme Belisarius hearynge in what daunger the men of Aucon stood was come among the Picents: and so was Narses in likwise. The captayns and their armies met both together about the towne. There as they were consultinge concernynge the warre that they had in hand, and were deuisinge what was moste requisite to be done next of all out of hand, there appeared many doubtes and daungers in the matter. For yf they should go and besyege Auximum, Iohn & those that were besyeged wyth hym in Arimine should be left in apparant ieoper die, inespecially consydering that foode fayled them. Againe yf they should go to Arimine, they shoulde leaue behynd them at Auximum a great garrison of the Gothes, to the prei [...]dice of theyr armye and domage of the countrye.
[Page]In geuing of their verdittes manye of Opinions of thofficers against Iohn. theym that were chiefe officers of the campe spake much against the rashenesse of Iohn, in that he had shutte vp hymselfe in Arimine contrarye to the commaundement of Belisarius, and that of a proud an couetous stomacke, he had runne vppon hys owne heade, without regard of hys Captayne or of hys charge. When Narses perceyued A frend is tried at [...]ede. that, fearing least by y e meanes Iohn should be abandoned whom he loued most entierly, he spake hys mynde to thys effect. My Maisters (ꝙ he) when Thoration of Narses. men consult as concernynge the publyke vtilitie, in my opinion they ought to haue an especiall eye thereto, for it owne selfe, and not to hynder it eyther for malice or for loue. Certainly all other thynges set a syde, when I waye with myselfe the thing wherof we doe cōsult, me thinks I spie this difference in the matter. If we delay the siege of Auximū, there is no let but that with [...] fewe dayes after we maye attempt [Page 68] the same when we lyste. But yf we make anye taryance in [...] the souldiers that are at Arimine, we cannot afterward helpe theym when we would. For ere many dayes to an end hunger wyll so pinch theym, that they shalbe comp [...]lled to yelde themselues to their enemies. And therefore what indifferent Iudge doubteth, but that most spede oughte to be made thyther where tariance procureth vnrecouerable daunger. But Iohn (ye will saye) deserueth not to be succoured because he despised his captaynes commaunde ment, and through his owne wilfulnesse cast himselfe into that daunger. Admitte that all these things are true y • are reported of Iohn. What then? shall we for the hatred we beare to Iohn, willfully suffer the destruction of so noble and worthy a Citie as Arimine is, and of the innocent souldiers besieged in the same? I [...] the O noble and puissant Captaine Belisarius, yf Iohn ha [...]e offended thee, wylt [Page] thou wrek [...] his trespasse vpon themperour? who therby should lose both hys towne and his souldiers, to the greate preiudice of the publike weale? againe what shall men thinke, or what shall men say of vs and our armies if we sitting still like a sort of cowards and beholding it with open eyes, shall suffer our companions in armes to peryshe, and our besyeged Citie to be taken by the enemye, in manner harde vnder oure noses? My opinion is therefore that wythoute anye further protracting of tyme, we lead our armyes to Arimine, to succour our men that are in daunger. And afterward (yf it shall seme expedient) to besege Now called O [...]o. Aurimū & other of our enemis holds. To further thopinion of Narses w e al, y e very same time came letters frō Iohn vnto Belisarius, aduertising him y t the souldiers constrained by famin, had fallen to composition w t their enemies, to yelde w tin seuen daies, onles they were rescowed in the meane while. Herevpon, [Page 69] the opinion of Narses was confirmed by the assent of all the whole counsel. When it was ones fullye condiscended that succour shoulde be ministred The [...] que [...] of belisarius for the rescowinge of Arimine. vnto Iohn w e all speede possible, Belisarius prouyded for the same in thys wise. Fyrst he commaunded Ara [...]us to abyde in the same place where they then were, with a thousand horsemen willynge hym in anye wyse not to remoue from thence, nor by any m [...]anes to attempte fortune for anye occasyon, but onelye to defende bys campe yf the enemye aduentured vppon hym. After that, he furnyshed hys shyppes and embarked hys souldyers, commyttyng the charge of them to Herodian and Uliarius. But y • rule of the whole flete he wold shuld be at the discretion of Ildiger, cōmaun ding him forthw e to direct his course toward Arimine. Another part of his army he betoke to Martine, bidding him coast the shippes and kepe w e them as [...]ere as he could by the shore.
[Page]And assone as they approched their enemies so that thei came w ein kenning then of set purpose to kindle manye fires in their Campe, to the entent to make the enemy beleue y e they were a greater army then they were in dede. Whiles these kept by the sea coast, he himselfe went a contrary waye by the City Saluia. The same was somtime Saluia. a saire citie but it had bene destroyed and beaten downe to the grounde by the Gothes that came fyrste into Italye vnder Alaricus, so that nothynge remained therof more then the ruines. Belisarius therfore passinge by thys towne, marched by the mountaynes eschewynge the playner waye that leadeth to Arimine, by the fyeldes of the Fauenses and Pisauriens. For seynge that hys enemyes had a farre greatter armye aboute Arimine then he had, and that he had lefte a stronge garryson of theym behynde at Auximum, he thoughte it more for hys behoofe to vse wysedome and [Page 70] policie agaynste the Gothes, then to feight wyth theym in open felde. Marching therefore the waye before mencioned, when he came vnto the hilles that ryse agaynste Arimine, (as [...] nedes be lightly in so great an armye) he founde certaine of h [...]s enemies ranging abrode. The which beyng either slayne or elles taken prisoners, some of them with their faces sore mangled he let goe agayne. Who returninge to the Campe of the Gothes, brought tidynges that Belisarius was at hand wyth his whole power, for the confirmation whereof they shewed their faces newlye wounded. It was aboute noone when this newes was brought to the campe. And thervpon proclamacion was made to harnesse, & that euery man shoulde fall in order of battell vnder his antesygne. The Captaines hauyng putte their men in araye, waited for the commynge of Belisarius, lookyng continually toward the moun taines from whence he was reported [Page] to come. But Belisarius had aboute midday encamped himselfe in the moū taynes, a good way of from Ariminie, and came not downe to hys enemyes that day. By meanes whereof the Gothes hauyng stood gapyng for them all day to no purpose, at length about the Sunne setting brake their aray and retourned into their tentes. Howbeit, when night came, espying a great sorte of fiers on the sea coast, cleane contrary to that way that Belisarius was reported to come, (they were the fiers that Martyne and hys armye made) they were in great feare all that night, in so muche that there was not anye of them that eyther tooke any slepe or put of hys harnesse. As soone as it was daye, when they beheld the nauie also ready decked and furnysshed makinge sayle toward Arimine, for feare least The Gothes breake vp their s [...]ge before Arimine▪ they shoulde be entrapped by two hostes at ones, the one from the lande, the other from the water, they by and by brake vp theyr siege, and without [Page 71] any order fled to [...]. Fyrst of all arriued Ildeger with hys [...] at Arimine, and goyng on land spoyled the tentes of the Gothes. Anone after came Martine and Belisarius wyth theyr armyes. When [...] beheld Iohn and hys souldyers that had bene beseged, howe pale and leane they looked wyth hunger, turning him selfe to Iohn as it were to taunte him for hys rashenesse, he saide: ye are muche beholdynge to Ildiger, and worthye to thanke him for his paines. Iohn aunswered proudlye and arrogantlye Occasion of discord amōg [...] agayne, that there was no cause whye he shoulde thanke Ildiger or anye man elles saue onelye Narses. As who should saye, he desyred to haue it knowen, that Belisarius woulde smallye haue regarded hys delyueraunce, ys Narses had not compelled hym. These wordes troubled Belisarius, and they were the begynnynge of discorde.
[Page]For after. that tyme, Ioh [...] standyng in feare of Belisarius, cleaued vnto Narses. The residue also of his frends See what m [...]s [...] worketh. styrred vp Narses with euyll counsell against hym. Uouching that it was not for his honour being Threasurour of Thempyre, and one of the Emperours priuie counsell, to be led by thad uise of Belisarius, specially seyng that he him selfe, had an armye farre passyng tharmye of Belisarius, both in number and strength of souldyers, and also in pollicie of Captaines, and therfore he ought to seeke the glorye of the recouery of Italy from the Gothes, to hym self and not to Belisarius. These flatterynge persuasions set Narses in such a pryde, that he euer after encamped by him self, and would not folow Belisarins aduise in nothyng.
But consulted by hym selfe as touchynge these warres and all other affayres that were in hande. Neuerthelesse they went bothe together to the fiege of U [...]bine, but yet not in one [Page 72] campe. For Belisarius laye on the [...]ast syde of the towne and Narses on the West. At suche tyme as Belisarius was purposed to haue assaulted the towne, and had prepared engines for the same, Narses laughyng hym to sk [...]rne for his labour, within a daye or twayne after he came thither brake vp his siege and retourned with hys armye to Arimine, leauyng Belisarius & his company in worse case, then yf he had not come there at all. For the enemye perceiuinge parte of the armye to dislodge, beganne to take a stout cou rage, [...]nally regarding that part that remained still behynd. Neuerthelesse Belisarius beganne to rere vppe ordinaunce The good for tune of Belisarius. toward that gate of the towne where the ground was most leuell, & to geue the aduenture to wynne it by assault. Whiles he was putting these things in a readynesse by a meruelous good fortune it happened that the foū taine (the townesmen of Urbine haning no mo but that one onely) dry [...]d [Page] vp of the owne accord. Wherthrough it came to passe that the town for feare was yelded, vppon condition that the Gothes and the Citizens of Urbine should become subiectes to the Emperour Iusti [...]an, in as free and ample manner as other Italyans that were Imperiall.
The. vi. Chapter.
❧ Of the great dearth that was throughe all [...]taly, and how the Gothes besege Millaine and winne it thro [...]gh the discord of Belisarius and Narses. Whereof the Emperour beynge aduertised by Belisarius calleth Narses out of Italy. Whervpon Belisarius hauing absolute aucthoritie agay [...] procedeth wyth the warres, and besegeth A [...]mum, the sytuation and strengthe wh [...]reof [...] here declared.
WHen [...] was thus yelded vn to hym for as much as it semed not as yet expedient tattempte the [...]ege of Auximum, Belisarius led his [...] against the Urbeuetanes [Page 73] The winning of that towne was som [...] what difficult, because it stood vppon a rocke so stepe on all sydes, that men coulde not well come to assault it.
The onely hope was to wynne it by famin. For Italy was as it were so worne to the hard bones with continuall warre, and troden vnderfoote with many armyes, that there was not one citie in all the countrey, but it suffered Great da [...]h through ou [...] all Italy. scarsitie and penurie: the which penurie Urbeuetus also being at length op pressed, came in subiection to Belisarius. Narses lyinge at Arimine sent Iohn with an armye of men to wynne Cesena. At the which towne, as he was scalyng of the walles, he was rē pulsed with manye woundes, and lo [...] a great sort of hys company. In the same assaulte was slayne Phauotheus captayne of the Erules. Wherevppon Iohn desisting from Cesena, went to Forum Cornel [...], the whiche was yelded vnto hym by composition. The same tyme Mundilas and those that [Page] were w t him at Millaine, began to be wrapped in great distres. For Teudebert the French kyng (as is before specified) being by Uitigis called vpon for ayde by vertue of the leage that was betwene them, had sent to Uraias ten Millane besieged by the Gothes. thousand Burgonians vpō confidence of the which multitude he encamped himself not far from Millain, suffering neither corne nor any other kinde of sustenance to be conueyed thither. Mundilas had of necessitie bene driuen before to disperse his soldiers into Come, Bergome, & Nouaria, so that he had no great number of horsemen aboute hym. Howe be it the hardest of the mat ter was not the defence of the citie, for the Citizens of Millain wyth one accor [...] knitte themselues togyther in the defence thereof. But the feare was leaste victualle should fayle in so populous a Cytye, yf so be it the barbarous Gothes shoulde be suffered to continue longe in those borders. Belisarius therefore hauynge intelligence [Page 74] thereof, sent Martine & Uliarius thither with a great power, to thentent that Mundilas & they ioynyng together, might remoue the Gothes further of. When they came at the ryuer Po, which is frō Millain but one days iourney, they durst not passe ouer for feare of their enemies, but lyngered many dayes in the same place, frustrating day by day the hope of Mundilas & them that were besieged w t him. For where as they made promise to haue passed the riuer & come vnto Millaine, thei performed no part thereof. Dayly both hope & sustenance failed those that were besiged. At y • last after long lyngering Martine & Uliarius confessing the truth aduertised Belisarius y • they alone were not able to passe ouer y • riuer against so great a power of their enemies, onles they woulde wylfully runne in open danger of their liues. Wherefore if he thought it good, he shuld cause Iohn & Iustine which wer w t theyr armies not farre frō Bononie [Page] to ioyne w t them. Belisarius herevpon imediatly wrate vnto Iohn & Iustine commaundinge them to ioyne wyth Martyne, and to make all the spede they coulde to relieue theyr fellowes beinge besieged and in vtter peryll of their lyues. They sent hym worde againe that they woulde nothing do without the cōmaūdement of Narses. Therevppon Belisarius wrate again vnto Narses. Who albeit he gaue his consent that the armye shoulde go thyther, yet not withstanding, for as much as it was a thing done by Belisarius, he went about it verye slowly and negligently as men are wont to do in other mens businesses. By this meanes the matter was so longe delayed, that at last they were vtterly deceyued. In the meane tyme Millaine was euery daye sorer afflicted then other, intollerable hungre welnye pyned them away, and the citie wauing betwene hope & feare, abode such miseries & anguish as almost no menwere able to abide [Page 75] again. At y • length being brought Millane is lost through the discorde of Narses and Belisarius. to vtter extremitie Mūdilas & his souldiers fell to cōposition to abandon vp the towne so they might escape with theyr lyues. After whose departure the Gothes enteryng into the citie, spared neither yong nor old. For they flew in euery place not only such as were able to beare armour, but also thold men & yong boyes. The women were geuen in seruitude to the Burgonions, & the A notable c [...]ueltie. citie rased to the ground. Reparatus a citizen of Rome beyng taken in the towne by the Gothes, was hewen in smale gobbetts & throwen to dogges. Thus was one of the goodlyest & most populous cities of all Italy (through the discord of Narses & Belisarius) put to vtter destructiō. In this ruine & ouer throw of y e citie, were slain of y • Millainers about. xxx. M. When Belisarius had tidings of it, he tooke great sorow for the same, & wrate vnto themperour Iustinian, the beginning and proceding of all the whole matter.
[Page]Iustinian being certified of the trueth, was much offended thereat, but yet pu nisshed not any man for it. Only he cal led home Narses out of Italy, cōmitting Narses is called out of Italy. the whole charge & authoritie of the warre vnto Belisarius. Herevpon Narses w t part of his armie retourned into Grece, & Belisarius with all the rest abode still in Italy. Who now hauing no man to ouerthwart him in his determinatiōs concerning the warre. Although that his chief care rested vppon Uitigis & Rauenna, yet he minded to take two townes mo from the Gothes, before he proceded with hys arinie against Uitigis & Rauenna. The towns that he desired were Auximum and [...] both of them very strongly situate, & both of them throughly manned by the Gothishe garrisons.
For neyther woulde he leaue at hys backe Auximū hauing in it thre thou [...]sand of chosen souldiers, whiche were able to do muche displeasure & hinderance to his adherents: nor yet Fesules [Page 76] because that as long as y e Gothes held that citie, he thought nothing shuld be in rest through Hetruria. Herevpon he deuided his army into thre parts, of the which he toke one with him to besiege Auximum, another he sent by Iustine & Cyprian against Fesules, & the third he betoke to Martine & Iohn Uitalian, cōmaunding them to encampe abouts the riuer Po, & to deteyne Uraias with his hoste as long as they could in those borders, to thentent thei shoulde not come to raise any of the siges among y e Thuskans & Picents. And if thei were not able to kepe him still there, then to folow him in the taile. Martine & Iohn therfore setting forth into Lubardye w t that part of the armye that we spake of before, wanne the citie Dertone situate by the riuer Po, and from thence did their endeuour to trouble Uraias & y e Gothes. Cyprian & Iustin w t another armye going vnto Fesules, albeit the besieging of that citie were very difficil for y e nature & roughnes of the place, [Page] yet not withstandyng they brought theyr campe as nere as they could, & be sieged it from a higher ground, where the way lay more plaine to the towne. Belisarius himself with the puyssantest Belis. besiegeth Auximū. company of all, beset Auximum. Uitigis had placed in Auximum the best that he could pyke out among the Gothes, & was very circumspect in fortifiyng of that towne. Coniecturing that which was most true, namely that Belisarius would neuer procede to the besieging of Rauenna, onles he had first subdued Auximum. When Belifarius had well viewed the situation & nature of the place, he was past all hope of winning Auximum by force. For the citie standeth vpon somwhat a high grounde, & besides that there were within to defende it, apuyssant band of chosen men of warre, able to geue battell euen in thopen field. So he had none other hope, but only to tame them by famin, for asmuch as there was a great number enclosed w t in [Page 77] the citie. And therefore Belisarius omitting assault, pitched his campe round about the hill on euery side, narrowly watching that nothing shoulde be conueyed in to them. But lyke as that large compasse of his campe was good to prohibit the portage of things in, so was it vnprofitable against sodain inuasions of the enemie. For they that were w tin, might at their pleasure make sodaine assaults vpon what part of the Campe they lysted out of the towne aboue. And the souldyes of Belisarius lay so farre one from another, that they coulde not readily helpe at need. By this meanes it came to passe that the enemye continually infested the campe, and diuers skyrmysshes were therevppon fought. Moreouer, there was a certain moyst ground not farre from the citie, where there grew muche grasse. This field was as it were the place of theyr dayly exercises, when eyther the besiegers or the besieged resorted thyther for forage: and [Page] sometyme theyr courages were so kyndeled on bothe sydes, that almoste all the whole Campe ranne thyther to feyght. In these encounters the Souldyers of Belisarius preuayled in multitude, and the Gothes by the situation of the place, bothe partes beynge equall in manhod and prowesse. The lyke conflictes were also at Fesules, for there were manye sodayne alarmes geuen, and welnye daylye skyrmyshes betwen [...] the besiegers and the besieged.
The besiegers had none other hope of atteynynge theyr desyre, then by keepynge the besieged from sustenaunce, and famisshinge them for want of foode. For there was no hope to wynne so stronge Cities as those were by force. And therefore by takynge vp standynges in places conuenient about the townes, they cutte of all carryages and conueyaunce of thynges in.
¶ The. vii. Chapter.
¶Of townes that were besieged by the Imperialles, how the French men comming into Italy after that they had put two armies to flight the one of the Gothes the o ther of the Imperials bothe in one day, retourned home agayne, and how Fesules was yelded to the Imperialles.
WHyle the warre was in this state and that Auximum among the Picentes, & Fesules among the The cause of the sodaine commyng of the frenchmē into Italy. Hetrurians were narowly besieged, there happened a straunge chaunce about the riuer Po. For the frenchmen with their Captaine Thewdebert, hauing passed ouer the Alpes, came in great number into Lumbardye. The cause of their comming (as afterward was knowen) was thys. Because that when they perceyued how warre was made in Lumbardy, they being a warlike people & in maner sauage, were of [...]nded that suche a countrey beyng [Page] their next neighbour, should fall as a reward to them y • could get the vpper hand, and that thei themselues sytting still lyke cowards the meane whyle, should accepte such to be their neyghbours, whom the fortune of victorie appoynted to them. This was the occasion why they passed the Alpes. The same tyme Uraias beyng often writtē to by Uitigis, had passed the Ryuer Po and was marchinge wyth hys armye toward Rauenna. Martin and Iohn likewise newlye sent thyther by Belisarius, preuentinge Uraias, had encamped themselues not farre from the same place, to the entent (if they could) to haue stopped hym of hys passage. Their campe was distant frō the campe of Uraias about. vij. myles. In the meane season, the Frenchmen sodainly came into those quarters. Ura [...]ias & the Gothes by reason of the leage that was lately taken betwixte them, supposed they had come to their ayde, lyke as they had doone before in the [Page 79] warres about Millaine. These french men y • passed ouer the Alpes at that The number & armour of the frenchmē time w e Theudebert, were to the num ber of foure score thousand, wherof ve ry fewe were horsemen & those attended alwaies vpon the kings person, all the residue being footemen. Their armour was not in pikes nor in bowes, but to keuer their bodies w t, they bare a tergat & a skull, and to strike the enemye w tall, a sword & a byll. In the battell they vsed moste commonlye their billes, the which strake w e such force, y • neither head pece nor tergat was able to hold out the blow, but that they cut through, nor any man was of power able to w tstand the violence of y • stripe. These therfore as frendes of the Gothes, being suffred to passe ouer the ry uer Ticinus at the bridge by Pauie, did afterward much hurt & displeasure to thinhabiters of Pauie, & of a sauage cruelty slew the wiues and children of the Gothes as they found them abrod in the country, anon after passing ouer [Page] Po, when they approched nere Ura [...]as campe, whether it were of set purpose, The Gothes and the imperials tourned both out of their campes by the french men. or through rashenes, they fell a quareling & consequently a feighting w t the Gothes. Thend of the fray was, that the Gothes being put to the worse forsoke their campe, & flying not far from the campe of our men, caused the souldiers of Belisariꝰ to wonder sore what thei shuld meane. For thei had hard no thing of the comming of the Frenchmen, & therefore thei thought verely y • Belisarius had bene come by some priuie & vnknowen way, to destroy Uraias. Herevppon arming themselues in hast, when they had gone a litle foreward, sodeinly they met w t the frenchmen, & being not able to retyre without battell, were enforced to feight, in the which they were soone ouercome, & for asmuche as they durst not repayre tot heir campe, they had none other way to saue themselues but by flight. The Frenchmen getting the vpper hād both of y • Gothes & tharmy of Belisarius [Page 80] in one day, obteyned the campes of them both also, & rested in them finding good store of victuals in eche of them. Uraias fled to Rauenna, & the souldiers of Belisariꝰ through y e fields of y • Placentines snd Parmenses gate ouer y • mountaine Appennine & went into Hetruria. This sodain cōming of the Frenchmen troubled both Uitigis & Belisarius. The thing that Belisarius feared most, was least the Frenchmen should come into Hetruria & oppresse his army that besieged Fesules. For through y • fields of the Placentines & Parmenses, it is but a shorte & a The Frenchmen retourne againe into Fraunce. redy way into [...]etruria. But y • french mē whē they had taried a whyle about Po, & coulde fynde neyther wyne nor other necessaries (the countrey beyng left bare by meanes of the long continuance of the warre) so that they had nothynge to feede on but Beof, nor nothynge to drynke but the water of the ryuer, within short space they fell into diuers diseases.
[Page]Of the which forasmuch as they dyed in great number, they determined to retire backe, and so they went home againe into Fraunce, y e very same way that they came oute ouer the Alpes. This was thende of the Frenchmens voyage into Italy. The Gothes that were beseged w tin Fesules, being sore Fesules is yelded the Impe rialles. constreined w t hunger, when they saw that rescow was often promised & yet none came, at length yelded vppe the towne to Iustine and Ciprian by composition. When they had receiued the towne & placed a garrison therin, they went w e all the rest of their army vnto Auximum. For Uitigis had promised to come w t all his whole power to raise the s [...]ge before Auximum. And forasmuch as Uraias was then with hym, it was none other like but he woulde haue done so in dede. By reason wherof Belisarius was cōpelled to gather all his power aboute him out of other places, to thentent that after hys long continued syege, he would not be sett [...] [Page 81] beside his purpose. But when this often promised succour came not, and yet they stiffly held their owne to thuttermost, Belisarius determyned to compell them to yelde by some extremitye maugre theyr harts for the compassing wherof he inuented this pollicie.
The. viii. Chapter.
❧ How after that Belisarius had corrupted the water of a certayne well nere vnto Auximum the townesmen yelded themselues and the towne vnto hym by composition. The besyeginge of Rauenna by Belisarius and of hys wonderfull good fortune, and his wise dealing there at such tyme as the Frenche Ambassadours came thyther, in somuch that he caused the offers of the Frenchemen to be reiected and a Truce to be taken for further communication to be had wyth the Emperour for a small peace and agreement. Durynge the whyche Truce the storehouses and garners of corne in Rauenna are sette on [...]yre no man can tell how.
[Page]WYthin a stones cast of the walles of Auximum, on the north side of the towne there was a wel w t a very freshe spring the which Belisarius purposed to take from theym, bycause he perceiued that the townsmen had none other place to fetch water at but onely there. To bring this matter to effect he commaunded his armye to be in armour by the dauninge of the next day, and to geue an approch to the walles. The Gothes thinkinge they had prepared them to thassault, placed themselues orderly vppon the battell ments. Belisarius in the meane time sent fiue men conninge in such feats. with mattockes and axes, well pauished w t the bucklars and tergattes of a great number that were sent w t them for their defence, to vndermine the well and to cutte downe the tymber work. Who assone as they came there dyd get them vnder the shed that couered the well, & being saufe out of daū ger from the walles, beganne to digge [Page 82] downe the Mason worke. But when the Gothes perceiuinge that all their endeuour was about heuing downe the well, they yssued out of the towne and assailed theym verye fi [...]rslye. The An encounter aboutbrea king downe of a well. fraye was harde vnder the walles in a place of aduantage and easye to the Gothes coming downe to the defence of the well, but very vntoward and vn indifferent for the souldiers of Belisarius to make assault in. In this coflicte were many slaine, but most of Belisarius In this were slaine of Beli sarius souldie [...]s souldiers, for the Gothes darting frō aloft, myght easly endomage their enemies. Howbeit Belisarius was euer at hand calling still vpon hys men and encouraging them w t a lowd voice and would not suffer theym to geue backe, but euer put freshe men in the places of suche as were wounded or slaine. This encounter being begonne by the sunne rising, lasted vntil noone. At the last his souldiers pearsing stout ly vpon the Gothes, compelled theym to recoyle into the towne. Then they [Page] returned backe and called away those that were digging downe y • well, supposinge that they had dispatched their worke. But they had done litle or nothing to the purpose in mining downe of the Mason worke. The cause therof was by reason that y • well being made in old time, was wrought so close and so sure, that it had bene an easier matter to cutte a piece out of a whole quar rte then to haue dygged downe anye parte of the wall of it. When it was perceyued howe that all that they had done, and all theyr feyghtynge was but lost labour, Belisarius caused the reste of the water to be infected wyth the Iuce of venemous herbes, wyth stynkinge Carions of dead cattell, and wyth a kynde of stone called Asuest so longe vntyll he had vtterlye marred it, that it was not to be occupied any more, so that the Gothes fyndynge scarcetye of water by the mystre of thys well, had muche a doe to relyeue theym selues wyth that lyttle [Page 83] and corruped water that they had in fylthye puddles wythin the towne.
After thys Belisarius neuer soughte to disquiet theym anye more, eyther by skermishyng or by anye other meanes, but satte styll peaceablye to beholde the ende of the matter. At length mention was made of yeldyng and the Gothes requested that they myghte departe to Rauenna wythe bagge and baggage. Belisarius hearynge theyr demaundes, was in doubte what he were beste to doo [...].
For he thoughte, that to lette goe so manye good men of warre and therby to augment the strengthe of hys enemies y • were at Rauenna, shuld be nothing to y e profite of y • weale publique: Again to sit spending of y • time in vain about Auximū, he thought perillous & preiudicial, inespecially seing it was re ported y • y • frēchmē were cōming to thaid of y • Gothes. But most of al stoud in contentiō w t him his own souldiers, who in recōpens of their miseries and [Page] calamities endured at their longe continued siege, loked of dutie to haue the spoyle of the towne, and would not in anye wise suffer themselues to be defrauded therof by anye composition or agrement Finally when on thone side Auximum vel ded to Belisarins. the Gothes were sore pinched w t penu rie and scarceti [...] of things necessarie, and on thother side Belisarius in maner forced by the importunitie of the tyme, at length throughe Belisarius greate trauell the matter was concluded, that the one halfe of all that was in the towne should be geuen to hys souldiers for theyr share, and the Gothes shoulde keepe the other halfe styll, prouided that the Gothes whiche were wythin the towne of Auximum, shoulde serue Belisarius in hys warres, in lyke case and estate wyth other of hys souldyers. After thys sorte were thynges knytte vppe and the Towne surrendered accordynge to the composition. When Belisarius had thus gotten Auximū [Page 84] into hys hande, he assembled all hys power togyther, myndyng to procede Belisarius goeth to besege Rauenna. agaynst Uitigis and Rauenna. As sone as he came thyther, by and by he sent Maximus one of his captaines w t parte of hys armye to watche and keepe the banckes of the Ryuer Po, to thentent that nothynge shoulde be conueyed into Rauenna that waye.
For one of the mouthes of that ryuer falleth into the Sea not farre from Rauenna, from whence there is a certayne dych cutte oute of the whole ground, wherin the ryuer is conueyed to the Towne. Belisarius therefore myndinge first & formest to disappoint them of this commoditie, gaue Maximus charge to kéepe the hythersyde of the Riuer w t that bande that he had deliuered vnto him. Uitalis also cō ming out of Dalmatia at the comman dement of Belisarius, had committed The wonde [...] full good fortune of Belisarius. vnto him the keping of the furtherside w t another band. There happened the same tyme a wounderfull chaunce, & [Page] such a strang thing as hath not lightly bene heard of. For as a great number of shippes and galeyes were comming out of Fraunce laden wyth corne and victualles makinge sayle toward Rauenna, the Riuer fell so lowe, that ma ny of the ships stood styl for want of wa ter to beare them. Wherby it came to passe y • they were all taken by the souldiers of Belisarius. This was y • fyrst token of good lucke wherw t fortune beganne to further the procedynges of Belisarius. For it could not be remē bered that euer any such thyng had hap pened before. By this meanes was al libertye of caryinge in and out by the ryuer Po cutte of from Rauenna. As for by sea nothing could be conu [...]ied in by reason that the enemes of y • Gothes were euery where lordes of the sea.
Agayne on the land Belisarius wyth his armye kéept them so short, that he would not suffer oughte to be caryed that way. Whyle Rauenna was thus straightlye besyeged, there came Ambassadours [Page 85] out of Fraunce to Uitigis, offering that the Frenchemen French Ambassadours to Vitigis. should come into Italy and rayse the syege, aud doubtlesse to slea Belisarius wyth all hys armye, yf so be yt that the Gothes woulde be content to admitte them as coparteners of their Empyre. This stout bragge made by the french Ambassadurs, dyd set the hearers harts in a pryd. For thei promi sed to bryng fyue bundred thousand men of warre, whose comyng (if he were in hys ryghte wyttes) Belisarius woulde neuer abyde. For yf he did, they threatened to s [...]etch hym and all hys companye wyth theyr holberdes. These hyghe wordes dyd partlye puffe vp Uitigis & hys Gothes w t pryde, & partly made them afraid. For if the Frenchmen came into Italy, it was not to be doubted that they shuld get the vpper hand, but it was a difficulte matter to be beleued, that they would keepe touche and play the good fellowes in parting of the Empyre.
[Page]And therfore yf the Frenchmen shuld come they mistrusted least they would be as much to their confusion as to the Belisarius sen deth commissioners to Vitigis. cōfusion of their enemies. This doubt of theirs Belisarius helped to increase. For he beynge a sage Captayne and pollitique in all affayres, as sone as he knewe of the commynge of the Frenche Ambassadours, sent his commyssioners also to Rauenna, both to offer the Gothes peace and attonement wyth the Emperour, and also to wythdrawe theym from societye wyth the Frenchemen, by puttynge them in remembrance of their former vnfaythefull dealynge. The Gothes when they had hearde the Frenche Ambassadours and Belisarius Commyssioners what coulde be alledged on bothe sides, takinge deliberation what was best to be done, after longe debating of & on, preferred thattonement w t the Emperour. By thys mea nes the French Ambassade was dismissed w tout the thing that they came [Page 86] for, and often treaties were had w t Belisarius concerning the same, and dyuers commissioners and messengers went to and fro for conclusion thereof. Finallye thys was the ende of the [...] betwene the Gothes and the▪ [...] matters debated. That the determynation of all controuersies should be referred to the discretion of the Emperour Iustinian. Herevppon Ambassadours were sent to hym and a Truce was taken betwene the besyegers and the beseged. In the meane while it fortuned that the common storehouses at Rauenna and all the corne The storehouses are set on fire. in them was burned vp, y e mischaunce broughte the Gothes in greate distresse, consyderynge theyr owne corne was burnt vp, and Belisarius woulde not suffer any more to be brought in, the whych (he sayde) he dyd vpon this consideration, to the entent the Gothes shoulde be agreable to more indifferent articles of attonement. Howebeit Uitigis was in a mer ueylous mistrust, because it could not [Page] be learned by what meanes the [...]yer [...]ame. Some thought they were set a fier w t lightnig, other supposed it to be done by some malicious persons, & othersome mistrusted that Belisarius should be the doer of it. The Qu [...]ne also was suspected for y e matter. Who forasmuch as she was forced to marry w t Uitigis against her will, was therfore demed to beare hatred and malice towarde hym in her harte. This burnyng of the grayne dyd greatly trouble Uitigis and the Gothes, & brought them in maner to vtter dispayre. For if the fyre came by lyghtninge, they mighte thinke that God and the heauens were agaynste theym. Or yf it were done of a set purpose, they wist not whom they might truste. So were they lyke wythin a whyle to be quyte w toute corne, and withoute all hope of comming by any more, because y e Beli sarius after the burninge of the storehouses, looked more straitlye to theym that none should be conueyed in.
¶ [...]he. ix. Chapter.
❧ Dyuers of the Gothes become Imperiall, The Emperour sendeth hys Ambassadours wyth articlles of peace to Rauenna the whiche of the Gothes are well lyked and ioyfullye receyued. But Belisarius perceyuing that more aduantage is to be gotten otherwise wilnot subscribe vnto them, by meanes whereof riseth a suspition that Belisarius wyll make hymselfe Em [...]erour, the whych the Gothes beyng glad of, to further the same, proferre their fubmission and obedience vnto him, and he accepteth it promising to take his othe at Rauenna for performaunce of their demands whervpon be is receiued royally in to the town, & dismisse [...]h the most part of the Gothish souldiers▪ through whose departure hauing made himself strong, he vtterly refuseth to vsurpe as long as thempe [...]our iustinian liueth. The gothes in Pauie create a new king who maketh profer of submissiō vpon like condition the whych [...] vtterly [...], & [...] prisoner to Constantinople with diuers of his noble men and all his Threasures,
About this tyme many of y e Gothes The reuolting of certaine Gothes. to Belisarius. that inhabited the Alpes, sent word to Belisarius that they woulde yelde theymselues vnto him.
[Page]There are vppon the Alpes many castles, the which in old tyme were kept by the Gothes placed there to dwell.
For Tha [...]pes do disseuer Italy from Fraunce, rysing of a wonderful hight very hard to clymb vnto or to passe ouer, the which passages it was expedient to be well kept. And therefore Theodorich kyng of the Gothes dyd both place a puyssaunt company of his countrey men with their wyues and children in those wast grounds, and also buylded them casteles & holds. Sisigis one of y e Gotishe nobilitie, who had certain Castles in Thalpes, was the first of all that of his frewyll receyued the souldyers sent into those coasts by Belisarius, persuading other Castles to do the lyke. The same tyme Uraias was in Lumbardy, musteryng of souldyers to carye wyth hym to Rauenna. He had already raised an army of foure thousand men. Of the which the most part were inhabiters of Thalpes.
Who hearyng that Sisigis was reuolted [Page 88] to their enemies, & that the Castles wherein they had their wyues & children were assayled, they compelled Uraias first & formest to lead them thither. Wherevppon he tooke his iourney w t al the power that he had raised, into Thalpes, and there besieged Sisigis and the souldyers of Belisarius. When newes of this gere came to Iohn Uitalian and Martine, who the same tyme had theyr campe in Lumbardye, they also without further tariance marched toward Thalpes, & toke certain Castles in theyr waye. In the same were taken many of the wyues and chyldren of them that serued vnder Uraias. When the fathers, husbands, & kinsfolke of them had knowledge thereof, they forsooke Uraias campe & fled to theyr enemies, to the entent to recouer them againe.
Uraias beyng thus forsaken of hys owne souldyers, retourned with a few into Lumbardy, & neuer set his minde any mōre eyther about musterynge of [Page] other souldiers, or succouringe such as were besieged. So Uitigis & the Gothes that were at Rauenna, beyng for saken of their owne people & destitute of all hope of comforte, were still beseiged and suffered euerye day more distresse then other. Whyle the Gothes stoode in this estate, thambassadours returned frō themperour, Dominicus & Maximus both of the Senate. They brought Iustinians aunswere to those demaunds that Uitigis & the Gothes The answere of the Empo [...] to the demaunds of the Gothes. had made as concerning the concord & agreement. The sūme of the Emperours decree was this. That Uitigis should hold styll all that he had beyond the ryuer Po, & surrender all that he had on thyssyde. That he should delyuer to the Emperour thone half of his threasure, & kepe the other half for him selfe & that all the Gothes inhabityng on the hyther syde of the Ryuer Po, should become subiectes to thempyrs of Rome. When the Ambassadours had first conferred w t Belisarius, they [Page 89] entered into Rauenna and declared their commission, the which things both Uitigis and the noble men of the Gothes were glad to here, and consented thereto with all their hartes. But A crafty & suttell kynde of dealing. Belisarius was very sory to see it. For it spyted him to the hart, that when he might fully haue had the victorie of the Gothes, it shoulde be taken out of his hand. And therefore anone after when the commissioners retourned, and requested him to subscribe the articles he would not put to his hand. The which thing brought the Gothes in a merueylous maze, fearing to be deceyued vnder a counterfet pretense of peace. In so muche that they beganne to saye openly, they woulde doe nothyng as concernyng the peace, without the consent of Belisarius. Thambassadours themselues and suche as were chiefe officers in the Campe, were greatly displeased with Belisarius doing, and thought he dyd not well in disobeyng themperours cōmaūdemēt. [Page] And therevppon bred a suspicion, as though Belisarius went aboute to make him self emperour, & were vtterly minded to w tdrawe his obediens frō Iustinian. This suspicion was almost in euery mans head at that time with the which opiniō the Gothes being induced, sent priuely vnto him, exhorting him to take y • west Empyre vpon him himselfe, and not to acquire it to another. For if he woulde so do, they sayde that the Gothes woulde be contented to become his sub [...]tes, & to obey him with all theyr harts, & that he should [...] ioyntly enioy the kingdome of the Italians & the Gothes, together w t an incomparable puissa [...]. These thinges were wrought priuely by the Gotishe nobilitie. Uitigis perceyuinge that suche profers were made, sent his messengers also vnto Belisarius encouraging hym vnto the same. Belisarius ponderyng these thynges wyth hymselfe, and consideryng they myght be [...]eatlye for hys be [...]oofe, y [...] they were [Page 90] handeled wisely, sent awaye into sundrie places with theyr bandes, Iohn Uitalian, Bessas, & Aratus, men of much authoritie in hys campe, but in no wyse his frendes, pretendynge an excuse as thoughe so greate armyes coulde not well be victualled together in one place, and that they shoulde finde more plentie & abundaunce of victuall and forage in other places.
This excuse was pretended, but in déede they were sent awaye to the [...]ntent that with their presence they should not interrupt him of his doings. Afterwardes he him selfe sommoning before him all the officers of his camp, when he had sufficientlye debated with them as concernyng the distresse that the Gothes were broughte vnto, what woulde you [...]aye ( [...] he) yf we shoulde by this warre atteyne at theyr handes, not onely those things wherewyth the Emperour séemeth to be con tented, but also greater thynges.
[Page]Euery man for hym selfe commended that greater thyngs shoulde be atteyned if it might be. When he hard them saye so, withoute further disclosinge of the matter, he dismissed the counsell. And therevppon he sent one of his com pany to Rauenna, aduertising the Gothes that he was cōtented to do as thei had counselled hym, exhorting them to make spede in the matter. The Gothes as they y • were alreadye oppressed with famin, without any delay sent theyr commissioners fully authorised by the prince and the common consent of them all vnto Belisarius. These persons when they came into the camp spake [...]thyng before the souldyers, but talkynge with Belisarius alone, tolde hym that they were come to receyue his faythfull promise and othe for thaccomplishment of the matter before debated. There were two kinde of promises propounded by them, wher vnto they required him to be sworne. Thone was that he shoulde gouerne [Page 91] them with iustice and equitie, maineteyne and supporte the customes and lawes of the Gothes, and not be offended against any of them for ought that had bene done in tymes past, with diuers other things of lyke purport.
The other was that he shoulde from hence forth proclaime himselfe king of Italy & of the Gothes. If he woulde agre to these articles & be sworne to the performance of them, they would set open their gates & receyue hym & all his armye into Rauenna. Belisarius sware to all thother demaundes according as the commissioners had requested, but concernynge the takynge of the kingdome vppon him, he sayde he woulde take hys othe before Uitigis & his noble men when he was come to Rauenna. The cōmissioners mistrusting not but that he would haue bene king in dede, delayed the takynge of his othe in that behalfe, as though he shoulde haue performed the same before the noble men immediatly vppon [Page] his comming to Rauenna. But Belisarius purposed nothyng lesse. For Iustinian the cause why Belisa. woulde not take vpon him to be em [...]. when he made him Lieutenaunt generall of the warres, had bounde him with a great othe, that he shoulde not take vppon him nor vsurpe the kingdome or Empyre, as longe as he were alyue, nor yet suffer himself to be accompted or called by the name of tyrant, King or Emperour. This his othe he was determined to kepe vnuiolated, & did but daly wyth the Gothes in that behalfe. Uppon this composition [...]he yelding of Rauenna to Belisarius. the Gothes verye desirouslye called Belisarius into the towne.
And he with hys armye in royall order, and wyth hys shyppes trymly decked, bryngyng in them abundaunce of all kynde of victualles, entered into Rauenna to the great reioycement of the Gothes and theyr armye. Nowe because there were a great number of men of warre of the Gothes wythin the towne, Belisarius myndynge to abate theyr power, wythin a few daies [Page 92] after hys comming thither, licensed all such to departe home, as dwelled on thys syde the ryuer Po. They beynge wearyed wyth theyr longe continued warfare, were verye willing to retourne home to their frendes. And so the multitude that was at Rauenna being diminished, the armye of Belisarius waxed the stronger, and were euen as Lordes of the towne. As thinges fell oute in this wyse the nobilitie of the Gothes that dwelled in anye part of all Italy, eyther came them selues, or elles sent their commissioners vnto Belisarius to Rauenna.
But when Beli [...]arius beganne to make delayes in the takynge vppon hym of the kingdome, men beganne to maruell what he shoulde meane, and also to cast doutes of hys doynges. The whyche suspicion was augmented Belisarius is sent for out of [...]taly. vppon the sodayne sendynge of Iustinian vnto Belisarius commaundyng hym to retourne home.
[Page]For the fame went & certain had made report to the Emperour, that Belisarius went about to make himself king of Italy, & had already taken it vppon him. For feare wherof Iustinian sent for him immediatly out of Italy. The Gothes [...] that, coulde not at the first by any meanes persuade them selues, that he would returne to themperour Iustinian. But when they saw preparacion made for the same, and all thynges put in a readinesse toward his iourney, then they knewe well ynoughe that Belisarius had wonne them in by a trayne and had vtterly de ceiued them. But what remedy? For he had both the towne and their noble men in his hand, so that they could not so much as bewayle their misfortune one to another, but that he m [...]st nedes be priuye to it. When the Gothes that dwelt on the furthersyde of Po, heard [...]ydinges hereof, they assembled themselues togyther at Pauye, and there bewaylyng one to another the commō [Page 93] misfortune of their nation, and the deceitfullnesse of Belisarius, at length would haue made Uraias theyr kyng. The whych thyng he would not in any Vraias refuseth to be made kyng of the Gothes. wyse suffer them to doe, excusing him selfe by thys reason, that for as much as he was Uitigis brothers sonne, he myght not seeme to haue done eyther lyke a kynsman or lyke an honest man yf he shuld take y e kyngdome vpon him whiles Uitigis were alyue. Through thys allowable er [...]se alledged for hymselfe, he was the occasion that Ildouade Ildouade is made king of the Gothes. a man of great a [...]horitie and power amonge the Gothes, and which had bene ruler of Ueron a longe tyme before, was created kynge. Ildouade therefore beynge sent for oute of Ueron vnto Pauye, was there inuested in hys purple Robes of estate, and pro claymed kynge of the Gothes, to the entent he shoulde studye and take care for the saufgard of hys countrey men. Beyng in thys sorte made kynge, he sent ambassadours by & by to Rauēna [Page] vnto Belisarius, geuing them charge to put hym in remembraunce of hys [...]he effect of the ambassade sent by Ildouade to Belisarius. promise lately made for the taking vpon him of the kingdome of Italy & of the Gothes, not letting to reproue him openly of breakinge his faithfull promise, through whiche cautel the Gothes were deceyued. Wherefore if he woulde yet accomplishe his promise in proclaiming him selfe kyng, and shewe the same in his doings, Ildouade offered him selfe to come to Rauenna, & to laye of hys robes of estate at hys féete. But yf he had rather be themperours slaue then to be Emperour himself, he oughte not to be discontented though Ildouade & the Gothes that remayned endeuoured to prouide for the saufgard of theyr weale publique. Thys was the summe of theyr ambassade.
Belisarius answered openly there vnto, An example of a faithfull subiect and of an inuincible mynde. that as long as the Emperour Iustinian lyued, he would neuer take vppon him to be kynge. Wyth thys answere the Ambassadours retourned [Page 94] to Ildo [...]ade vnto Pauie. And Belisarius hauynge decked hys Nauie, sayled towarde Constantinople wyth Uitigis and dyuers other noble men of the Gothes, and all the kynges Threasure, the fyfth yere after the warre was begonne in Italy.
The thyrde booke of Lenard Aretine, concernyng the warres in Italy against the Gothes.
❧ The first Chapter.
¶ Thentertainement that Belisarius and his prisoners had at Constantinople. A commendation of Belisarius good gouernement, by comparison betwene hym and the Captai [...]es that succeded hym.
WHen Belisarius was come to Constantinople y • Empero [...]r Iustinian welcomed hym with great ioy, and hauing hym in great reputation and honour, put out of mynd all mistrust that he had cōceyued of his doinges before. The Gothes whom he had brought with him were entertayned very gently and courteously, and men wondered to beholde theym: the whych mighte seme to haue chaunced [Page 95] not without good cause. For there was Uitigis king of the Gothes that of late What they were whom [...] Belisarius brought prisoners to Con stantinople. had besyeged Rome wyth such a multitude, and his wyfe Amulusuentha, the nece of Theoderich somtime king of the Gothes who first brought them into Italy, and there gaue them possessiōs. Furthermore there were the two sonnes of Ildouade then Kynge of the Gothes, whom Belisarius fynding in the Courte of Uitigis at Rauenna, wold not suffer to depart, but brought them away w t hym into Grece. There were other noble men of the Gothes also, whom al men beheld, wondering at the puissans of Belisarius, that had atcheued so great exploytes, and exto [...] ling him wyth prayses to the skye, in that he had lately before subdued Aphrycke, and now Italy, vnder the dominion of Iustinian. And thus went the worlde in Grece. In Italye after the departure of Belisarius, the order of thynges by the commaundement of the Emperour was committed to the [Page] discretion of Iohn, of Bessas, & of Uitalis. Constantian also was come out of Dalmatia, & was added to the nūber of the Gouernours. It was soone seene what difference there was betwene y • gouernment of these men & of Belisa. For (to omitte his skilfulnesse in feats of warre & cheualrie wherin he far surmounted [...]he prayse of belisarius. al the Captaines of his time) there was in him a singuler humanitie & gentlenes, through the which he exhibited himself aswell to the poore, as to the rich. There was no maner of per son, but might haue casie & fre accesse to his presens: & besides that, he was wonderous bountifull & liberall. Unto his souldiers that had lost theyr horses, weapons and armour (so it were not cowardly) forthwith he gaue new agayne. Of the husbandmen he had so great regarde, that in leading of hys armie, he would not suffer any of them to be hurte or endomaged. Hys souldiers durste not be so bolde as to touche the Apples hangyng on the trees.
[Page 96]Through this his straightnesse in obseruing the lawe of armes, he obteyned that his campe was more plentifully serued, then the marketts in any citie. So free and without peryll was the conueyance of all things that were to be solde. His vprightnesse towarde suche Cytyes as were in societie and leage wyth hym, no man is able to reporte as it deserued. Men myghte heare of the great good tournes that he dyd for them, but not that he vered or molested any of them.
But as for them that succeded hym, they were nothynge lyke hym, neyther in humanitie, neyther in prowesse, neyther yet in vpryght dealynge. For bothe they them selues were Pyllers and Pollers, and also they suffered theyr Souldyers to fall into all kynd of licentiousnesse & disorder, beynge proude to theyr partakers, and easye inough to be entreated toward their enemies, by meanes wherof within short space matters began to [Page] goe cleane backeward, and to slyde into open and manifest ruine, as I shall shewe you hereafter.
The. ij. Chapter.
¶ The diligence of Ildouade kinge of the Gothes, the greate misgouernaunce of the Imperiall Captaines, by meanes whereof they be brought lowe and the Gothes incresed in strength and courage. The death of Vraias, the death of Ildouade, the electtion and death of Ataricus, and the election of Totilas.
ILdouade beyng newly created kyng of the Gothes (as I declared before) after the departure of Belisarius, went in hand wyth hys matters very diligently. For he gaue commaundement that all the Gothes and all the Italians that fauored the Gothyshe parte, should at a daye appoynted meete all togyther readye furnished with armour at Pauye. His armye at y e beginning was verye slen der, but it cōtinually encreased & euery [Page 97] daye was in better hope and comforte then other. The couetousnesse and The iniur [...] ous dealing of the Empeporours Collectours causeth great alteration. wrongful dealing of their aduersaries dyd not a lytle helpe the Gothish part. For the collectours of Iustinian vnder the colour of forfeytures and arrerages, began to vexe the people of Italy maruelous bytterlye, and to compell theym to the payment of summes that were neuer due. For by calling an accounpt of all thyngs that the Italians had taken charge of in the tyme of Theoderich fyrste kynge of the Gothes, or of anye other of the Kynges that succeded hym, togyther wyth the accompte of all suche offices as anye Italyan had borne durynge the sayde tyme, and moreouer by makyng inquisition for the money lately promysed by the Cytyes to the Gothes, the whyche they chalenged to the Emperour as due by the name of forfeyture, they broughte euerye man priuatelye and all the Cytyes generallye in suche a despayre, that they wyshed y e Gothes [Page] to be lordes of all againe & therevppon many, of their owne frée will reuolted to Ildouade, helpinge to augment the number & strength of his armie. The lyke grudge was also in themperours armie. For loke with what greadines the money that was neuer due was exacted of the Italians, with like pinching were the souldiers restrayned of theyr due deserued wages. There was no regarde had of any thyng but one, which was to satisfye the Emperours vnsatiable coustousnes, by gathering of money and spendinge none againe. And therfore as well the souldyers as the Italyans, beyng constrained with so great wronges, sought to bryng the Empyre to decaye. By mea nes whereof Ildouade daylys growynge stronge, brought vnder hys obeysance all the Cy [...]es beyonde the [...]uer Po, and all the Cytyes pertey [...]ynge to the estate of Uenic [...], and [...]armye was fullye furnished with number both of Italians and Gothes. [Page 98] Through the whyche within a whyle he was so encouraged, that he was not a [...]ayde to leade hys armye into open [...]ld, to try the fortune of battel. This [...] was fought not farre A battell betwene ildouade and the imperialles. f [...]ō Now called Treuizo. Taruisium against Uitalis one of the Emperours Captaines. In the which Ildo [...]ade gerting [...]hupper hand made [...] a slaughter of Uitalis army y • whiles the capta [...]e himself w t a few sted away, all the rest were [...]ither slain or taken prisoners by the Gothes.
Through this [...]ictorie being so great & so notable, it is a wonder to see how the gothes were encouraged, & how much the power of their adu [...]rsaries was aba [...]d. In so much y • not only beyonde the Ryu [...]r Po, and vnder the dominion of Uenice, but also all suche as on thys syde the Po, helde of the Gothy she part, were throughly strengthened: and the name of Ildouade grewe famous euen in the Emperour Iu [...] Court, and amonge foreine nations also.
[Page]It was not long after but that he pursued to y • death Uraias a man of much aucthoritie and estimation among the Gothes vpon presumption y • he should consp [...]re with his enemies This cause was pretended. Howbeit somme were The death of Viaias. of opinion that he tooke prytch agaynst Uraias bycause that latly before, there had bene altercation betwen his wife and the Quéene. But surely I cannot thi [...]ke that Ildouade being a graue & wyse man would be so farre ouersene as to be induced with brablinge matters of women, to kill suche a man as was Uraias. I beleue rather that the cause why Ildouade dyd putte him to death, was that he feared his power & aucthoritie. For it is manifest that the Gothes in generall are of nature very mistrustfull, and scarce sufficientlye faithfull toward their kinges. Many of the Gothes dissal [...]wed the death of Uraias, and openly detested it as a [...] and wicked acte. By meanes wherof it came to passe, that Ildonade [Page 99] himself was [...]ayne by one of his owne [...] whiles he sate at his meate. In The death of Ildoūade. his stead was Ataricus created King: but he raigned not long. For w tin fiue monethes after his election, he was slain by his owne subiectes for his euil The death of Ataricus. behauiour & misgouernement. Thus hauing killed two of their kinges w tin two yeres space, they offered the kingdome Totilas c [...]ated king. with one consent vnto Totilas. This man before he was made kynge had borne great aucthority at Now called Treuizo. Tarui siner, which is a citie of the Uenetians and hys father was brother to [...] late Kynge.
The. iii. Chapter.
❧ A larger declaration of the election and [...]ation of Totilas mencioned brieflye in the Chapter before. The Emperours C [...]ptaines through their insaciable gredi [...] of pray stryuing for the bootie before they had gotten it lose the Citi [...] Veron [...]hiche was deliuered into their handes, and bet [...]ay their [...]wne companie.
[Page]AFter that Ildonade (as I shewed before) was s [...]aine, Totilas dreading to be in daun ger bycause [...] was so nere of his kinne, sent priuely to Kauenna & made compact with themperours captaines to turne vnto them with such as he had rule of & to yeld vp y • town of Taruisium into their hāds. A day was limited for performans of y • matter. But ere euer y • day came, the Gothes repenti [...]g y • they had [...] in y • death of Ildouade, & that they had made [...] their king, a [...] nether of wisdome nor courage able to defend y • Gothes against so great, strength of their enemies, began to encline to To tilas the nere ki [...]sman of [...]douade, & to wishe that he were their king. In cō [...] out of the way, & made To [...]ilas king in dede. [...] hauing intelligence of these things y • had [...]appened in Italy, found great [...] & [...]oward nes of his captai [...]s, y • in al the [...] y • their e [...]mies were [...] at [...] among [Page 100] themselues, & among so many alterations & chaunges, they hauing so great oportunity for y e spēding of their matters, had done nothing at al. The captaines moued w t this dishonorable rebuke, assēbled togither at Raue [...]. There when it came to [...]onsul as concerning the war, it was thought best, first & formest to send an armye against y • citie Ueron. For they had [...] secretly put in hope of [...] of y • towne. The captaines were in [...] of whō the thie [...]e were [...] & Alerāder lately sent thither [...] perour for the collection of his money. Therfore setting forth wyth a greate armye, when they appro [...]hed [...] Ueron, they determyned to putte in tryall the hope that was lately geuen theym. For there was one Martine a noble man of that Countrie that had a Castle not farre from [...]eron: [...] (for as much as in his [...]rt he was [...]) had allured the ke [...]r of one of the gates to let in y • empero [...]s army▪ [Page] The matter being in this wyse closely agreed vpon, when the captaines came thither with their armye, they sent before one Arrauades an Armenian w t a number of pycked souldiers to take the gate, & there to awaite the cōming of the rest of the hoste. No parte of promyse was lefte vnperformed in that place. For in the dead of the night whē the souldyers came to the gate, the trai to [...]r set it wyde all open & let them into the [...]. They enterynge in and hauynge also taken the walles aboue the same, gaue notyce thereof to the rest of the armye, The Gothes percei [...]ing their enemies wythin the towne, Note the co [...] of [...]himperialles and what came of it. [...] out at another gate. The captains hearinge that their men had taken the towne, marched forwarde. But ere euer they came there, they fell at altercation for the [...] by y • way, & [...] miles from the [...]ifie. In y • meane while the [...]. Now there is a castle abo [...] [...] of [...]eron which hath a very great prospect, both into the [Page 101] towne, & also farre into the countrye. The Gothes which were fled into this hold, perceiuing few of their enemyes to be within the Citie, and the armye to a [...]yde still without makinge no approch toward the walles, sodainely yssued out of the Castle, & aduenturyng through the citie, recouered to the gate where their enemies came in & shut it. The souldyers that were entered by night, were partly oppressed, & partly [...]ying to the walles made resistens frō aboue. Anone after, the captaines com ming thyther & finding the gate shut. although y • souldiers w tin called to thē for help, desiring them not to abandon them in that sorte, yet notwithstanding they retired backe againe out of hand. Some of the souldiers leaped downe the walles & saued themselues: among which number was Artauades the Ar meman their guide. The rest were eyther slaine or e [...]s taken prisoners: By this meanes through the misgouernement & couetousnes of the Captaines [Page] striuing amonge they [...]selues for the praye before they had gotten it, when they shuld haue made most spede for y • winning of the same, the matter quailed about Uero [...].
The iiij. Chapter.
¶Totilas by his pollicie o [...]rcommeth the Imperials being of greater force and num [...] his army was, in the which vier [...] [...]ie he sheweth great [...].
AFter this the Captaynes of Justi [...]ian (for because their attempt fell out so ylfauoredly and dishonorable at Ueron) began to fall at debate among th [...]mselues, euerye man putting the fault in other, & there vpon departyng out of those quarters, they passed ouer the riuer Po, & marched toward Plea sans. At that time was Totilas at Pa uy who hearing of the comming of his enemies, raised as ma [...] men of warre as he could with all spede possible. In the meane tyme the captaines hauing [Page 102] passed beyond Pleasans, had entāped themselues by the side of the riuer Po. Totilas albeit he were far ouermat [...]hed, yet he determined to goe against them w t suche power as he had and to [...] of battell. So when both the [...] approched neretogy [...]her, & that thencounter was fully ro [...] vppon by both parties, Totilas in the [...]yghte tyme sent certayne of hys horsemen before, commaundyng th [...]ym to gette ouer the Ryuer almost twenty furl [...]ges aboue the campe of their enemies, & as soone as the battell was ioyned, to re [...]e and assayle thee nemye [...] wythe as [...] noyse and [...] as they [...]. He himselfe (when he sawe hys tyme) [...] [...]warde hys [...]nemyes. The [...] captains did y e like. There [...] A combate hand to hād▪ [...]. [Page] Against this man offered himselfe to the combat Artauades the Armenian of whome mencion was made in the entering into Ueron. So in the sight of both tharmies, they fetched their races & ranne one at another with their speares in the rest. Artauades thruste the Gothe through the right side with his speare so that he fell downe dead. And he himself being driuen by mischaunce vpō the speare of the dead mā sticking in the ground through the only force & violence of his owne horse, ranne himself vppon the poynct of it, in so muche that it wounded him through his Curet, of the whyche wounde he dyed within thre dayes after. The two battelles in the meane tyme encountred very fierslye, & euery man shewed hys conning what he was able to doe wyth his weapon. When the battell was at the whotest, & that both parts wer most intentife to their fe yghtinge, victorie as yet enclining to neyther side, y • souldyers of Totilas which [...] had passed the [Page 103] riuer came & set vppon Themperours The Imperialls are vanquished by Totilas. Captaines behind. Whervpon arose a great noyse, & manye being beaten downe, first they brake the araye of the Emperours armye, & anone after put them to open flight. For after the time theyr battelles were once opened, their enemies pressed so sore vpon them both before & behind, y • thei were sone disper peled. Many were flain by the Gothes in y • chace, & many escaped by bypathes & vnknowen wayes. But the greatest nūber was of thē y • were takē prisoners Moreouer (which neuer happened before) al y • stādards, bāners & antesiges, The great & dishonorable losse in thys battell. of themperours army were taken in y • battell, & being brought vnto Totilas, made his victory more famous & renou m [...]d, in y • he hauing scars half so many men in his armye as his enemies, had wittingly & willingly encountred w t a greater power then his own, of whom thorough his marciall pollicie he had gotten the victorie. Hauing thus gott [...] the vpper hand, he vsed the victory very [Page] courteously vexing none of y e prisoners but sēding diuers away w t out rāsome. The gentlenes of Totilas after hys victorie, The which his gentlenesse dyd greatly augmēt his honour and [...]. The captaines of Iustiniā y • escaped, fled first vnto Pleasans, & from thence wēt euery mā a sundry way, busying thēselues as much as might be in raysing a new armye of men.
The, v. Chapter.
¶Iustine one of themperours captaines is be seged within Florens, & rescowed by thother imperial captaines, who in the pursute of their enemies through an vntrue report cast in sodain feare are with great slaughter put to flight. Totilas recouereth diuers tow nes in Lombardie, raiseth the walls of Bene uent & besiegeth Naples, A comparison be twene the good gouernement of Totilas and the misgouernaunce of the Imperiall Captaines.
WIthin a while after this victorie, Totilas now conceuing greater things in his mind, sent an army to Hetruria wherof he made captayns thre of the worthiest men of al the Gothes, [Page 104] Beldas, Rodericke, & Uliaris. There was in Hetruria a captain called Iustine, one of those y • had bene at the foresaid battell. Who after the discomfiture had neuer ceased leuing of a The beseging of Florens & the raising of the same. new power, & fortifiyng of the townes neuertheles tharmie of Totilas came sodainly vpon him, & besieged him w tin y e walls of Florens. Iustine feared nothing so much as scarcety of victualles. For nothing coulde be conueied in, & that which was wythin alreadye, was lyke to be soone spent. Wherevppon he sent to the rest of the Captaynes at Rauenna & aduertised theym in what perill his estate stood, requesting them of succour. Being moued w t this message, Bessas, Ciprian & Iohn Uitalian came into Hetruria with their armies when the Gothes had vnderstanding of their approch, by & by they brake vp their stege & dislodged their campe, not staying anye where, vntill they came to a place called Muciall whyche is a dayes iourney from Florens.
[Page]As sone as tharmy of confederats was entered into Florens, the Captaynes thought it good to leaue a fewe behynd theym for defence of the towne, & they themselues with all the rest of tharmi [...] to marche against thenemie. Whyle they were on their way, it semed good y e some one of the Captaines should goe quickely before to assaile thenemy, & to staye him from going awaye, & the rest w t all spede should follow after. When lottes were cast, the charge of goynge before fell vnto Iohn, who with his men in good order of battell, made haste towarde the enemye. Nowe the enemies being afrayed at the cōming of the hoste, forsoke the place where they had emcamped themselues fyrst, and gate them to a hyll thereby bothe stepe and hard to clymbe vnto. Yet for all that Iohn made no curtesye at the matter when he came to place, but directed hys battell agaynst the hyll, and wyth a noble courage endeuored to get vp by playne force. Hys enemyes [Page 105] stood earnestly at defence, as they that might easlye make resistens from the higher ground. In thys place whyles Iohn stroue to get vp, feightinge valiantly amonge the formest, one of hys companions was strikē through wyth a pycke and slayne hard by hys syde. An vntrue report cause of a shamefull discomfiture. Wherevpon forthwith rose an vntrue rumour (which was lyghtly beleued) that Iohn was slayne, and therwithall his men began to runne awaye. The brute hereof beinge reported to theym that came with the rest of tharmye behynd, togither wyth the fearfull flyght of suche as were at the battell, made them also most shamefully to runne away. Neyther was there any measure of their flyght, but scatteryng themselues here some & there some they brake their aray and forsoke their standard. By meanes whereof the Captaynes themselues were fayne to take theym to flyght also wythoute compulsion of any enemie. After this time they came no more togither againe, but euery mā [Page] kept by himself one in one towne and another in another, as they had recouered vnto oute of the chace. Yet for all that, the Gothes retourned not to the syege of Florens, partly for feare of the greate power of theyr enemye, the whiche although it were dispersed, yet was it styll within the compasse of Hetruria, and partlye because the win ter drewe nere. Thys was the ende of the seuen yeres synce Belisarius beganne the warres fyrste. The nexte yere following, as sone as the tyme T [...]tilas r [...]couereth towns i [...] [...]mbardy of the yere serued to encampe in the fielde. Totilas leuied an armye and came into Lumbardye, and there besieged Cesen, and Petra the whyche towne is now a dayes commonly called by a corrupte name Bretines, as for all the reste of the townes of that countrye, for the most parte eyther he had wonne them by force, or ells taken them by composition, whē he had thus compassed hys matters in that countrye, he passed from thence wyth hys [Page 106] armie into Hetruria. There finding al thynges whoter for hym then he looked for, he determyned fullye not to spende hys tyme in wa [...]e about them. And therefore passing ouer the ryuer [...]yber which bownd [...]th Hetruria, he tooke hys iourney throughe the Umbres, the Sa [...]ines, and the Matses into Campanye, in the whych place Totilas raseth the walles of Beneuent. he wonne the Cytye of Beneuent, and rased downe the walles of it to the grounde. For he was loth that so stronge and defensible a Citie shuld be lefte for hys enemyes, (yf they shoulde happen to comme into these borders, to make theyr Bulwarke and fortresse of. The whyche done The syege of Naples. he besyeged Naples, hauynge fyrste entreated theym gentlye wyth many wordes, that they woulde rather accepte hys frendshyppe, then procure hys displeasure. But hys words were to no purpose. For there was in garrison Conon one of Iustinians Captaines wyth a band of not so fewe as a [Page] thousand souldiers, who would suffer nothing to be done in counsell, wythout his consent. The which thing whē Totilas vnderstoode, he planted hys siege not farre from the Citie. How beit he assaulted it not, but sate styll in quiet. In the meane while he sent part of hys armye abroade, and recouered Cume with certayne other townes in those borders, by the whiche he gate a greate masse of money, Besides thys there happened certaine noble womē of Rome to be taken in those places. An example of clementie and magna [...]imitie.
All the which Totilas caused to be verye courteouslye entreated wythoute restraint of their libertie, and sent thē home agayne to their husbandes and parentes wyth an honorable company to saufconduit thē. And forasmuche as in those borders was not anye Captayne or anye power to withstande the doynges of Totilas, he sent efte one parte of hys armye and efte another, so longe vntyll he had broughte vnder hys obeysans Appulia, Lucanie, and [Page 107] Calabre wyth all theyr townes. By meanes whereof it came to passe, that there was not any more monye paied oute of those countryes to Iustinians Captaines and souldiers, nor any man See what want of good gouernement doth in war. that would obey the Captaines, or set one foote oute of doores to goe wyth theym, For the souldyers lurkynge wythin the walled townes robbed and pylled as well theyr frendes as theyr foes, and throughe theyr extortion euyll rule made hauocke of al thynges. And the Captaynes for the same cause kepyng themselues wythin y e walles, dyd no more but onelye defende the townes from the enemye. For they parted the Cytyes amonge theym, so that Iohn had the charge of Rome, Bessas the charge of Spolet, Cypryan the charge of Perusia, Iustine the rule of Florens, and Constantian the kepynge of Rauenna. In the meane tyme Naples began to be euerye daye in worse case then other, by meanes of the siege. For Totilas hauing sent [Page] for hys flete had kéepte theym so short, that nothing coulde be conueyed in nei ther by water nor by land. Whereby it was to be perceyued, that vnles some bodye rescowed it, that Cytye was lyke at length to come in subiection to the enemie.
The, vi. Chapter.
¶ A newe Lieuetenant is sent towarde Italy whose cowardnesse in protracting of the time doth not a litle endomage the imperi alls. Demetrius deuiseth prudently for the r [...]owing of Naples, which for want of courage in executinge the same tourneth to his owne destruction.
JUstinian hearinge of thys, and beynge disquieted for the miserable A new lieuetenant sent in to italy. estate of Italye and the dishonour of the Empyre. Sent one Maximius (receyuer of hys reuenues) into Italye, to amende and repayre thynges amisse, geuynge hym a nauye of shyppes and an [Page 108] armye of Thracians and Armenians. Captayne of the Thracians was Herodian, and Captayne of the Armenians was Phases. Besydes these, he had also in hys shyppes no smalle The [...]ward nes of Maximius. number of the Hunnes. Maximius departynge from Constantinople, came into Epyre. There in deliberatynge vppon the affayres of Italye, hangynge in doubte betwene hope and feare, throughe his flouthfullnesse and cowardyse, helost the tyme. For thys Maximine was a good gentyllman, of a mylde nature, meete for matters of peace, but altogyther vnskyllfull of warrelyke exploytes, and therefore fearfull, fyndynge delayes and eastynge doubtes in euery trifle. Now thaffaires of Italy at y • time, required quicke spede both in consultinge and in workinge. Iustinian saw so smal hope of any good doinge in Maximine, he sent one Demetrius (because that lately before he had serued vnder Belisarius in [Page] the warres in Italy) wyth another nauie into Si [...]. This Demetrius when he was arryued in Sicill, hearyng of the syege of Naples, and of the dystresse that they were putte vnto that were within, determyned to succour The prudent pollicie of de metrius yf he had followed it. theym, and that wythoute further delaye. Now for as muche as he thought hymselfe not able to dooe it by playne force, bycause that neyther hys shippes nor hys army were sufficient thervnto, he deuysed thys pollicye. He gate togyther all the shyppes that he coulde comme by in Sicill, and made of theym a greate flete as to the show, the whyche he fraughted wyth corne, and so made sayle towarde Naples.
Thys thynge dyd bothe greatlye comforte the besyeged, and also putto the Gothes in greate feare. For they had hearde saye, he was commynge wyth a greate number of shyppes, and they thoughte verylye he hadde broughte a greate power of men in theym. And surely yf he had gonne [Page 109] dyrectlye vnto Naples at the fyrst, all thynges had happened to good successe and the besyeged Cytye had oute of all doubte bene saued. For hys enemies were so dysmayed at the multitude of hys shyppes that they durste not haue made anye countenaunce of resistens. Howbeit he knowyng his own weaknesse, durste not arryue at Naples, but went to Rome, to thentent there to furnyshe hys nauye wyth men, and so to sayle stronglye vnto Naples.
But the souldiers that were at Rome woulde not take shippynge for hym. For by reason they had bene vanquisshed by the Gothes in twoo foughte battelles, they stoode in feare of theym beyonde all measure. Beynge therefore destitute of thys hope, Demetrius was compelled to go against hys enemyes wyth those shyppes onelye, that he broughte wyth hym from Occasion let slyppe wilnot be cawght againe. Constantinople. Totilas kepte continuallye readye furnysshed certayne [...]wyfte Pynesses in the hauen of [Page] Naples, and alwayes tooke diligent heede to the flete of Demetrius. wher fore when he heard that Demetrius was sette oute of Rome toward Naples, and that he was arriued at the nexte shore, sodaynelye he sette vppon hym wyth hys Pynesses thorowe the whyche sodayne vnlooked for assaulte, the shypmen and souldyers were stryken in suche a feare, that they tooke theym to flyghte.
The Gothes pursewinge them wyth theyr swyfte Pyn [...]sses, made a great slaughter and tooke all Demetrius shyppes with theyr freight and men. For none escaped of that flete excepte it were suche as at the begynning had leapt into botes & hidden themselues, among whom was Demetrius Captaine of the said flete:
¶ The. vii. Chapter.
[...] Demetrius say linge agayne to the rescowynge of Naples is taken prysonner, [Page 110] wherevppon Naples is yelded to Totilas who behaueth hymselfe verye courteouslye and frendlye both to the towne smen and to the Emperours souldyers, but towarde his owne men extendeth much seueritie in keping warlike discipline.
AFTER thys Marimine sayled A cowardly carpet knyght. oute of Epyre into Sicill wyth a greatter nauye, and a greatter furniture of men. And when he was arriued at Syracuse, through hys accustomed cowardyse in delayinge and driuing of, he loste the time againe. Neyther regardinge the necessitie, nor the intreataunce of suche as were besyeged. At the lengthe when Iustinian had sente straighte charge vnto hym, not wythoute threates, that he shoulde procéede, yet coulde not all that cause hym to sayle agaynste hys enemyes, but he delyuered the charge of hys fleete to Demetrius Herodian and Phases, and he himselfe abode still in Sicill.
[Page]It was nowe the dead of the wynter when they beganne to sette forthe.
And when they came wythin a lyttle A tempest. of Naples sodaynely the flete was taken wyth a vehement tempest, in so muche that neyther ores nor anye connynge in the world could saue theym but that they were dryuen aland perforce vppon the shore where their enemies Deme [...]ius is taken prisoner. were encamped. The Gothes perceyuinge that, ranne thyther and wythoute anye a doe tooke the shippes If any made resistens they slew them, the rest they tooke prysoners. Of the whych number Demetrius was one. Whom Totilas commaunded to be broughte fettered in chaines vnto the walles of Naples, where callynge Conon Captayne of the Towne and the souldyers wyth the Cytyzens of Naples, Demetrius by the Kynges commaundement made an oration, perswadynge theym not to looke for anye more helpe. For consyderynge that those twoo fletes wyth all theyr [Page 1011] men and furniture were loste, there remayned not anye hope for theym to truste vnto. They that were besyeged beynge sore pyned wyth hunger, when they sawe Demetrius taken and all hope of comforte [...]utte of, fell to weepynge and lamentation, not knowynge what to doe or which waye to tourne theym in so muche that all the Cytye was in a wonderfull trouble and disquietnesse for feare. When Totilas perceiued that, he called them and spake vnto theym as they stoode vppon the walles in thys wyse. Ye men of Naples, we haue not goone aboute to besyege your Cytye, for anye anger or dyspleasure that we beare agaynste you, but to thentent that by settinge you free from the bondage of oure enemye, we myght recompence you for the troubles that you haue suffered in the tyme of these warres at ourc enemyes handes, for keepynge your allegeans to the Gothes. For you onelye of all the Italians [Page] vtterlye againste your wills came in subiection of oure enemyes, compelled therto by violence & slaughter, and well nye by the vtter destruc tion of your Cytye. And therefore me thynkes I am asshamed that we haue besyeged you, but that necessitye constrayned vs because oure enemyes were amongest you. Wherfore assure your selues, rather of a good tourne and of frendshyppe at oure hand then of anye punishement. Moreouer for your sakes we wyll not be anye thynge strayghte laced toward oure enemyes that are in the Towne wyth you. For yf so be it they wyll render it vppe, they shall haue fre libertye and leaue to chose, whether they wyll serue vs in oure warres in lyke estate and case as other of oure owne souldyers, or elles departe whyther they lyste themselues wyth bagge and baggage. Thys oure promyse we are contented to confyrme wyth an othe. Bothe the [Page 112] Neapolitanes and the Emperours souldyers commended Totilas hys wordes. Neuerthelesse to thentent theyr yeldynge myghte seme the more honnest and reasonable, they desyred a Truce for thyrtye dayes, yf perchaunce anye bodye woulde rescowe theym wythin that tyme. Totilas aunswered that he was contented to geue theym not thyrtye, by thryse Naples is yel ded to rotilas. thyrtye dayes respyte. The besyeged wonderynge at so greate libertye, and playnelye perceyuinge that there was no hope of helpe, wythin fewe dayes after sette open theyr gates, The [...] and [...] behauiour of Totilas toward the [...] and receyued Totilas and hys army [...] into the Towne. When he was comme into Naples, he entreated not anye man otherwyse then well neyther was he greuous to anye personne. but rather vsed suche humanitie and courtesye as would not haue bene thoughte to haue b [...]ne in a barbarous Gothe.
[Page]For where as manye through hunger were broughte so bare and so weake, that they were not able to totre on their legges, and were fallen sycke, to the entent they should not cast theymselues awaye wyth ouerlayinge their stomackes by feedyng to greadely, he looked carefullye and diligentlye vnto theym, that not onelye the Citizens of Naples. But also the souldyers had euerye daye twyse, a small pyttans allowed theym by wayghte, streyghtelye obseruynge that they shoulde not haue more anye where elles and that euerye daye by lyttle and lyttle theyr meales shoulde be encreased. To Conon and the men of warre whych were mynded to depart, he appoynted shippes to conuey them. And where as by meanes of contrarye wyndes they coulde not departe wythin the daye limited vnto theym, yet not wyth standynge he gaue them frée libertye. And furthermore [Page 113] when as the wynde continued styll agaynst them, and that they determined to go away byland, he lent them horses and beasts for their cariages, allowing them moreouer victtualls and mony to spend by the waye, and also sente of the Gothes with them to sa [...]fconduyt thē. The seueritie of Totilas toward malefactours. Thus Totilas vsed gentlenesse toward straungers, but among hys own men he kepte so streight order, that he suffered no offence to scape vnponished the ponyshmente of stealers, quarrellers, & rauishers of women was death, and the forfeityng of all their goodes, to the vsc of them agaynst whom the dyspleasure was done. By meanes wherof wheresoeuer the Gothes encamped, or passed in and out through any of the Cityes or countries that were in leage with them, there was no harme done to any of them. But the case stode farre Licencious li berty pernicious to men of warre. otherwyse in those daies with the Captaynes of Iustinian. For the Captains themselues could not hold their hands from doing wrong, and the souldyers [Page] through their euell ensample fallen to all kynde of licentiousnesse, abst [...]i from nothing that was euyll. Neither was there any thyng more myserable in those dayes, then the people of Italy that were vnder thempyre, beyng wythoute theyr walles spoyled by the enemye, and wythin their walles by theyr owne men of warre. For the Captaynes hauyng taken the strong holdes for theyr ownc safegard, passed not what became of the poore commons. Throughe thys iniurious dealyng, despayre so encreased daye by daye more and more, that the Emperoure was fayne to determyne wyth hymselfe to fende Belisarius thyther agayne. For all the other Captaynes were so farre from recoueryng that whych was loste, that it was not lyke they shoulde any long tyme be able to kepe that whiche they had.
The. viij. Chapter.
¶ Belisarius beyng sente againe into Italy, in hys waye doth [...] Hydrunt [...] by the Gothes. the myserable estate of Italy at that tyme, Totilas receaueth Tibur and besiegeth Auximum, Vitalis is forsaken of [...]ys owne so [...]ldiers. Belisarius sendeth succour to [...], and repayreth [...] Totilas besiegeth Asculum and Firmum. Belisarius diligence [...] chosyng of hys [...]
FOr these considerations Belisarius was chosen agayne to take the charge of the warres in Italy: and yet the warres were scarcely finyshed the whyche all thys meane tyme he had made agaynste the Medes. Therefore when he sawe there was no remedye but to muster newe souldiers, (for he had lefte hys olde armye at the ryuer Euphrates,) he went about al Thrace, where throughe hys lyberall spendyng he gathered to the number of foure thousande withoute commission, the [Page] whiche he embarked spedely, and [...]akyng with hym vitalles the Lieuetennant of Illiricum whiche came newly to hym oute of Italy, sayled forwarde, & hauyng cut ouer the Ionian sea, arriued at Salons. In the tyme of thys iourney, he raysed a siege aboute Hidrunt a Towne of Calabre. For they that were besieged being compelled The rescowīg of Hidrunte now called Otronto. therto by the Gothes for want of victualls, had compounded to yelde vp the towne by a certayne daye, if they were not rescowed in y e meane time. Wherof Belisarius hauyng knowledge, cō maunded Ualentine to sayle thyther, & to cary with hym corne & other necessaryes, and to bryng awaye the souldyers that had bene long besieged there, puttyng newe in their romes. Thys was an easy matter to bryng to effecte. For the Gothes after the truce taken, loke [...] In greatest calme for a storme prouide. but slyghtly to them, not so muche as mistrusting that any body would come to succor them. By meanes whereof [Page 115] when the flete came sodaynly vpon th [...] vnlooked for, they trembled for feare & were fayne to breake vp their siege and get them further of. Ualentyne enteryng into the towne, toke the olde souldiers out of the holde, and placed newe in their steades, leauyng them victualls for a whole yeare. The which done [...]e returned with those shyppes that he brought with hym, vnto the reast of the [...] at Salons. After hys returne Belisarius sayled to Pole, where ha [...]yng Belisarius arriuall in Italy. [...] a while to practise hys yong souldiours that he had mustered in Thrace at length with hys whole nauye he sayled to [...]auenna. At hys commyng thither, he founde all thyngs in worse case through Italy thē he thought they had bene. For hys enemyes séemed to haue the better end of the staffe euery wher, and to stand in beste hope and possibilitye. Contrarywise hys frendes and adbearentes The misery of Italy through misgouernement. were euerywhere through all Italy discouraged and broughte in despair [...]. The cities and people of the [Page] country because they were pilled & [...]olested by y • men of warre, & the men of warre because themperour was behind hand w t their wages for a long tyme & payed none, became stubborne and froward, refusing either to be ruled by the captaines, or to set onefote out of dores to y • warres. And to say the truth they were brought to a very smal nūber. As for y e comming of [...]elisarius, it did rather en [...]rease their despaire then any whit cōfort them. For albeit he were a A Captaine is able to do no thing without men and monye. notable captaine, & out of all doubt in those daies perelesse, yea & in dede a very Master of Cheualrie, yet notwithstandyng forasmuch as he brought but a slender company with him (for he had but foure thousand & those were al [...]npractised and fresh water souldiers and had no money to deale amongest them, when he preached vnto them at [...] declaryng the cau [...] of hys commyng and exhortyng them to goe forwarde with the warres, neyther the To [...]esmen [...]or yet the men of warre [Page 116] were glad to heare hym speake, or gaue any token of comfort & good hope. Insomuche that it repented Belisarius hymselfe that he was come into Italy. In the meane tyme there rose a dissention Totilas [...] ueth Tibur. betwene the townesmen and the souldiers of Tibur, by meanes whereof Totilas beyng called to the ayd of the one part receaued the whole towne. The Citye of Tibur is a nere neyghboure vnto Rome, beyng distant from thence no further then syxtene myles. The takyng whereof was a great ey [...] sore and noyous to the Romaynes, as wherby they were dysappoynted of all thynges in Latium. After thys Totilas He besieget [...] Auximum. hauyng perfecte intelligence of the commyng of Bel [...]arius, wente with hys armye into the countrye of the Picentes, and encamped aboute Auximum. The very same season had Belisarius [...]he vnfaythfulnesse of the Illi [...]ian souldi ers towarde their captain. sent Uitalis with a Illirians erewe of Illirians into the countrye aboute Bononie.
[Page]After the [...]yme he had wonne a certain towne thereabout [...]s, and had beene receaued into Bononie, the Illirians without any cause why or wherfore for soke hym, and assemblyng themselues together went their wayes home. For y • whiche dede they afterward alledged this excuse vnto themperour, that whiles they wer seruing him in his warres in Italy, the Collectors of his tributes, did sel their lyuelond in their Countrie, and caste their wiues and children out of house and home, by meanes whereof they were compelled to returne thither to defend their owne. When Totilas heard of thys sodayne departure of the Illirians he sente out an armye of Gothes, in hope to haue takē Uitales and the reast of hys companye tardie. But they preuentyng hym, had recouered vnto Rauenna. Belisarius knowyng that they which were besi [...]ged at [...] were sore oppressed, sent to their ayde a thousand horsemen ouer whom he made three Captaynes Teremunt, [Page 117] Ricilas, and Sabinian, whoe entering into the towne priuely by nyghte, the next daye following made a skyrmyshe with the Gothes, by whō Ricilas one of the Captaines was slaine. The reast within a fewe dayes after determined to departe. For they sawe that by theyr tarying there, they dyd but helpe to spend their frendes victualls and necessaryes, and coulde do their enemyes no harme. Hereuppon stealyng out of the towne by nyghte, when they had gone aboute three myles on their waye, they fell into an ambushe of their enemyes. by whom being be set on all sydes and so put to flyght, they loste two hundred of their companye together with their apparell, armour, and all other stuffe & the beastes that caryed them. The residue after long and weary trauell recouered vnto Arimin. Fanum & Pysantum are Cityes standyng vppon the coaste of thadriatike sea, and are situate beetwene Auximum and Arimine. These townes at y e begynnyng of these [Page] warres, had Uitigis set on fyre, & beaten down the walles of them mydway to the grounde. Of these two Belisarius Belisarius [...] & manneth i [...] nowe [...] determyned to repayre Pysaurum, and to place a Thrope of horsemen in the same, for the accomplishment wherof, he sent workemen thyther secretly, to take iuste measure of the gates, the whiche he caused to be framed at Rauenna with lockes, henges, barres, and all other yron worke belongyng vnto them, and caused them to be conueyed by water to Pysaurum, writyng to the Captaynes and horsemen of Arimine, that they should sodaynly take y e towne and hange vp the gates, and mende vp the walles of rough worke, and clens [...] the dyches. As for all kynde of dyand he prouided that it was sent them by Sea. The horsemen of Arimine therefore when they had taken Pisaurum, did all thynges accordyng to Belisarius commaundement. Totilas perceauyng that, went thither with a great power to interrupte them of their worke.
[Page 118]But the souldiers had so busilye [...] them in scowring the dyches, in castyng of the trenches, in makyng of Rampyres, in fortefiyng the towne, and in repayring the walles & the bulwarkes, that the kyng wondered to see so many thynges so wyttely deuised and pollitiquely brought to passe in so fewe daies And therfore whē he had taried a while there aboutes, forasmuch as he saw he could do no good, he returned into hys campe before Aurimū, neuer y e neerer of hys purpose. Howbeit Totilas & the Gothes perceauyng that Belisarius shewed not hymselfe abroade in the open fieldes with themperours armye in no parte of Italy, but only kept himself within the walled townes and de [...]ended them, they determined not to syt altogether aboute Auximum onely but to make warre agaynst other Cityes also. Hereuppon Totilas went Totilas besi [...] geth Asculum and Firmum. with an armye and besieged Asculum and Firmum among the Picentes.
[Page]Belisarius being not able to [...] such as were besieged that called vpon hym dayly for helpe, (for he had not s [...] great a power that he durst venture abronde agaynst y e Gothes) was in great perpleritie, and toke it very greuously that hys name should be so dishonored. At the length he sent Iohn Uitalian to Themperour to enforme hym of the state of Italy, by whō he addressed his letters also, the tenor wherof contained thys in effecte.
The. ix. Chahter.
¶ The Copie of Belisarius letters to themperour the good successe of Totilas, the valiaunt Demeanor of Sisifride the [...] murtheryng of [...] and the manlinesse of hys souldiers.
MOste noble and puyssant Emperour [...] letters to themperour your Maiestie hath sent me into Italy slenderly furnyshed of men, horses, and monye, the which thing I declared vnto you before [Page 119] my departure beseching your highnesse to haue redressed the matter. In the which [...] albeit I could not preuaile: yet notwithstandyng it was my duty [...] to be obedient to your cōmaundement. Whereby I was constrayned to come forth with a fewe Thracians and Illirians, the same being fresh water souldiers and altogether vnskilfull of the warres, not knowing so much as howe to holde their weapons in their hands. And as for the olde souldiers that I found in Italy, by reason they had [...] [...]anguished in diuerse battells beefore by the Gothes, they are so afrayed of them, that they dare scarce once loke vppon them. Besydes thys, forasmuch as they haue bene long [...]ime defrauded of their wages, they ar not able to furnyshe themselues agayne with horse and armour loste and broken in the former warres, neyther will they consent to goe forth with them. And yet to saye the truth, there is not so greate a number of them, that they can encounter against [Page] the power of the enemye, without their owne manyfeste perrill and daunger. For the greater part of them that were wonte to fyghte vnder your hyghnesse banner in Italy, prouoked by the aforesayd dyspleasures, haue of their owne accorde reuolted to yo [...]r [...]. Furthermore you may not accompte hereafter, that you are lyke to haue any reuenewes here, toward the payment of your souldiers, considering that the enemy hath recouered y • greater parte of Italy, & that which remayneth is so empouerished and afflicted by y • warres, that it is not by any meanes able to yelde you tributes. Wherefore if the presence of Belisarius be sufficient to recouer Italy, you haue done asmuch as may be done in that behalfe for I am here in Italy. But if you purpose to ouercome your enemies in dede your Maiestye must make other prouision. For a Captayne (be he neuer so valiante, pollitique and fortunate,) is able to dooe nothyng, if he haue not [Page 120] wherwyth to accomplyshe hys deuis [...]s. And therefore it is requisite that you send me hyther an armye of myne own practised souldiers, together wyth a greate multitude of the Hunnes and other Barbarous people. Moreouer you must of necessitye prouyde that we may haue alwayes stoore of mony [...]. for wythout that, there is no good to be done in warres. Thus much dyd Belisarius write to themperoure at that tyme. Iohn going to Iustinian with these instructions, and hauyng taryed there a certayne tyme, had a very slowe & could sute for he could bring nothing to effecte. In the meane while forasmuche The [...] of [...]. as no man rescowed Asculum & [...] y • were besieged by Totilas, he toke thē by composition. From thence he departed out of the Picentes into [...]mbria and besieged Asessum and Spolet. Captayne of Spolet was Herodian and Captayne of Asessum was [...]. Herodian although hys piece were stronge and defensible, [Page] yet notwithstandyng he toke truce for a fewe daies. whitin the which because no rescue came, yeldyng the towne and the holde at the day appointed, he himself with hys souldiers reuolted to Totilas. But Sisifride behaued hymselfe more valiantlye: for albeit hys piece The valiant & faithfull demeanor of Si sifride. were nothyng so strong as the others, yet could [...] he neuer abyde to here any worde of composition, but lyke a stoute warrior, issued oute valiantly diuerse tymes vppon the Gothes, and foughte sundrye skyrmishes wyth them to hys great prayse and commendation. How▪ beit at the length fighting manfully he was slayne by his enemyes. The Citi [...]ens of Assisis beeing destitute of the helpe of that worthy Captayne, within fewe dayes after yelded themselues & their towne vnto Totilas. Frō thence Totilas led his armye against Perusium. The trayterous murthering of Ciprian & the mā fulnesse of his souldiers. Captayne therof was Ciprian of whom mention is made before among the Captaynes of Iustinian. Totilas perceauyng y • he could not wynne him, [Page 123] neyther by faire meanes nor by foulecorrupted one of his esquires called Uliarus for a piece of mony, by whose falsehod and treacherie he kylled him. Neuerthelesse after the death of Cipri an, the souldiers punished the treason vpon Uliarus head, and manfully defended the Citie still.
¶The. x. Chapter.
¶Totilas besegeth Rome, and Belisarius pre pareth to [...] the same. The misfortune of thimperialls at Portua, Pelagius a Decon of Rome goeth to Totilas to entreate for his Citizens & cannot be heard.
TOtilas therefore minding not to linger about it any lenger, brake vp his siege there, & made toward Totilas besegeth Rome. Rome. When he came thyther, he planted hys siege aboute the same in places conuenient, but yet he troubled not the husbandmen. For all the tyme of thys warres he neuer suffered anye of the Tylmen and husbandmen [Page] to be hurte or hyndred by hys men of [...]. There was in garrison at Rome Bessas one of the Emperours Captaynes, & Conon whiche not long Sithens had bene Captayne of Naples. Also Bel [...]sarius had sent thyther, Artasyras a Persian, and Barbation a Thracian with a conuenient number of souldyers, to looke to the saufe kepinge of the Citie with the other Captaynes. The Gothes beinge thus settled aboute Rome, Artasyras & Barbation yssued oute wyth theyr retinew and foughte wyth them. At the fyrste they putte theym to flyghte, but thorowe followynge the chace to farre, they were at length intrapped by their enemyes, and wyth the losse of the more parte of theyr men hardlye and narrowlye escaped themselues into the Cy [...]ye. From that tyme forward hope daylye decayinge, fyrste came derth and afterwarde famyne amonge theym. For nothynge coulde be conueyed into theym by lande, by reason [Page 122] the Gothes had besette theym rounde aboute. nor yet by water forasmuche as the nauye that Totilas had of late buyided at Naples, and then sente abroade, so scoured the Seas that no shyppe of burden coulde passe for theym. Besydes thys the verye same tyme arose wythin the Cytye of Rome greate presumptions of treason. For the whyche Cethegus [...]hyefe President of the Senate of Rome, beynge bannisshed the Cytye fledde to Centmucelles. While these thynges were a dooynge at Rome, another armye of the Gothes by the commaundemente of Totilas besyeged Pleasans. The same is a greate Cytye by the Ryuer Po, and all onelye of the Cytyes of that Countrye, contynued in faythefull obedyence to the Empyre. When Belisarius behelde these thynges, he was verye Belisarius deuiseth to suc cour Rome. sorrowefull and full of care for the peryll of the Cytye of Rome, [Page] in as muche as he was not able to remedy it from Rauenna where he was, because that wyth that small and slender companye whiche he had aboute hym, it was not for him to depart from thence, consydring hys enemyes held all the Countries betwene hym and Rome, so that he could not goe thither by land, wherevppon he deuised to succour them another waye. For the performance whereof leauynge Iustine with a band of souldyers at Rauenna, Now called Durazo. he hymselfe wente to * Dirrachium in Dalmatia, entendynge there to awayte the commynge of a new armie from the Emperour. In the meane tyme Rome was strayghtly besyeged in suche sorte that all thynges were worse and worse, and lyke to fall to vtter decaye and ruine. Ualentine and Phocas beynge sent before by Belisarius, helde the Towne of Portua, and from thence dyd greatlye moleste and endomage the enemye wyth continuall rodes almoste daye by daye. [Page 121] After they had doone thus a certayne space wyth good successe, and by meanes thereof greatlye reliued them that were besyeged, at length fallinge into The euill fortune of the imperialles. an ambushe and beynge enuiraned of their enemyes they were slayne, and but a verye fewe of theyr souldyers escaped, the whyche had muche a doe to recouer the towne of Portua. Thys slaughter of the Captaynes and the souldyers drewe wyth it a greater discommoditie, One mischief in anothers. necke. for it was the losse of a greate deale of corne by suche a meanes Uigilius the Byshoppe of Rome lyuinge at that tyme in Sicill, hearynge that the people of Rome were sore afflicted wyth famyne, had shypped a greate deale of Corne and sent it towarde Rome. The Gothes hauynge knowledge thereof, when the shyppes approched conueyed themselues before into the hauen, and hiding them behynde the Towres and buyldynges laye readye for theym in Am [...]ushe. The souldyers that were with [Page] in the towne for as muche as lately be fore they had loste theyr Captaynes, and their companyons for the moste parte were slayne, they beynge so [...]ewe lefte, durste not aduenture out againste their enemyes, but as well as they coulde from the walles and [...]warkes wyth shakinge theyr garmentes, wyth wagginge their handes and wyth crying oute a loude to them made tokens to the shyppemen that there was treason in the hauen, warnynge theym to beware and not to arriue there. But the shyppemen (as they that had not heard anye thynge of the vnfortunate battell and the losse of the Captaynes) tooke th [...]se sygnes and tokens that were made, as signes and tookens of gladnesse and encouragement to come with more spede. Wher vppon making the more haste, wyth a freshe gale of winde thei entered into the hauen. Where they were all taken hy the Gothes breakynge oute of the ambushe, to the greate discomforte [Page 124] and dispayre of the people of Rome, whiche hunge wholly vppon the onelye hope of that corne. In so muche that nowe the Towne was oppressed wyth intolerable famayne. And the Gothes therevppon preased the more An example o [...] employng [...]tuall [...]oodes. boldly vpon them. There was at the same tyme in Rome a certayne Deacon called Pelagius, who in this distresse of famine, had shewed very manye & notable workes of mercye vppon the people of Rome, by laying out hys monye & relieuing the want and ne [...] nesse of euerye man. For the whiche álmose dedes (whereas his name was greatly renoumed in times past, nowe it was farre more renoumed then before, The romains came vnto this mā humbly besieching him y • for the saufgard of the people of Rome, he would vouchsafe to go of Ambassade to Totilas and entreate him to graunt them a tru [...]e for a fewe daies within the whiche onlesse rescowe came, the Cytye should be geuen vppe vnto hym.
[Page]Pelagius forasmuch as he sawe there was none other remedye; obeyed the peoples request, and wyth hys instructions went to Totilas into his campe. Totilas coniecturinge the effecte of Prosperitie maketh men forget themselues. hys erran [...] (for he had learned by the rennegates the vtter necessitie and distresse that the besieged were brought vnto) entertayned Pelagius verye honorably at hys commynge. Howbeit before he had begonne to declare hys message, he hymselfe preuentyng him, wyth a longe and bytter oration, inueihed against the Romaynes, casting them in the teth wyth the benefites of Theoderich and the Gothes towardes them, and reprouynge theym of theyr vntrouthe towarde the Gothes. In thend he concluded that there was no waye eyther of communication or com position, onles they would beat downe their walles, and wholly submit them selues & al that they had bodies & goods to the wil and discretion of the Gothes [...]o be dealte withall in suche wyse as [Page 125] should please the conquierours. Pelagius hearing him talke so bytterly and disdaynefully and thynkinge in hymselfe that it booted not to stand in contention wyth hym, sayde thus vnto him. Forasmuch as thou Totilas hast not vouchesaued to here an Ambassadour tell hys message, but by preuen tynge hym haste abridged hym of the lybertie of speaking, we will flye vnto God the [...]efuge in extremities. God who of hys Iustice is wont to abate the courages of men, when they grow ouer proude and stately. When he had sayde those wordes, he returned by and by into the Cytye. The Romaynes seynge hym come agayne wythoute speding of hys purpose, were in suche an agonie that they wyst not what to doe nor whyche way to turne them. For on the oneside they were afflicted w t intolerable famine, and on thotherside stood before their eyes the outrageous cruelty of Totilas & of the gothes, whose most cruel hands rather then they would fall into, they fullye [Page] determined to starue thēselues for hun ger. By meanes whereof the people of Rome suffered and abode such thynges, as it is a miserie euen to rehers [...] them.
The. xi. Chapter▪
¶ Iohn Vitalian commeth with a newe power from the emperour, whervpon aduise is taken for the succouring of Rome, according to the whiche Belisarius goeth to Portua by water commaundinge Iohn to mete him there by lande. But he through the prospe [...]ous snccesse that he hath agaīst the Gothes commeth not there at all. By meanes whereof Belisarius is faine to deuise another way for the succouring of the Citie the which by his industrie takynge good effect agaīst thenemy is by the folly of his owne men interrupted to his owne great sorrowe and appairing of his health through rage of anger and sodayne feare, and to the vtter preiudice of Rome. For Totilas anone after taketh and sacketh it the whyche done he maketh an oratyon to his souldyers.
[Page 126]IN the meane tyme Iustinian sent The returne of iohn with answer from themperour. Iohn w t an armie vnto Belisarius. They were not any great number that he set forth at y • tyme, but he prepared to send a greater power oute of hand. For the whiche occasion he had sent his Chamberlaine Narses vnto y e Erulians & other barbarous nations inhabiting about the riuer of Danow, of the which some were alreadye come Debating in counsell for the rescowing of rome. into Thrace. When tharmies were as sembled to Dirrhachiū, & that consulta tion was had as concerning the war, it was agréed by one consent first of all to rescow the romains. But how that might be done there was diuersitie of opinions. Iohn persuaded to march w t all y t whole power togither thorow Ca labre & appulia & so to go to Rome. For if they went all in one companye they might be the better able to get the vpper hand wheras if tharmie should be deuided and some should go by sea and some by lande, none of bothe partes should be able to matche the enemye. [Page] Belisarius said he could wel alow the same opinion, if the people of Rome stood not at such an exigent. But now considering their estate, it was nedeful to make all spede y • might be. It was a long iourney to go through Calabre and Appulia, & if their enemies should mete them they might cast many letts in their way, whereas by the sea yf the wind serued, their nauie myghte w tin fiue dayes arriue in the Romaine hauen, & by theyr beinge so nere at hand, putte the Romaines in certaine hope & comfort. For he had heard of thunfortunate mischaunce of his captaines, & knew of the losse of the corne that was sent out of Sicill, wherevpon he consydered in his minde the despaire & disstresse y • the Romaines were in. Thys opinion was allowed in the counsell, & thervpon Belisarius setting forth frō Dirrhachiū arriued at Hidrunt. The Gothes which were besieging of that towne being striken with feare at the presence of Belisarius, brake vp their [Page 127] siege and flying from his sight retired to Brunduse, the which is aboute two dayes iourney from Hidrunt. By and by they sent vnto Totilas aduertising him of Belisarius comming, beleuing that he would haue iournyed by land. When Totilas heard that, forthwith he putte himselfe & his armye in a readinesse to goe méete hym. But when be vnderstoode that Belisarius went by sea, he addressed hymselfe whollye to withstande hym aboute the Citie of Rome, inespecially makynge prouision that nothing mighte be conueyed into the Citie to theym that were besieged, by the Ryuer Tiber. For the accomplishement whereof he deuised this practise▪ He chose a place aboute eleuē miles of from Rome where the Ryuer Tiber is narrowest, & there he layd ouer long beames from thonesids to thother in maner of a brydge at eche ende whereof he buylded a Towre of Timber, & drew a long yron chaine by the brydges side, at the endes whereof [Page] he made two bastiles the whiche & th [...] aforesaid towers he manned with soul diers to defend the bridge. In y e meane Belisarius cō meth to Por [...] for the rescowing of Rome. while was Belisarius come to the Ro mayne hauen. And hauynge sette hys men a land, taryed for Iohn & tharmie that was with him. The Romaines knowynge of hys comminge, endured all their extremityes with better courage vppon hope of rescowe. Iohn af ter the departure of Belisarius, hauing cut ouer the narowe seas, had inuaded the Gothes looking for nothing lesse, and hauynge putte theym to The good succ [...]sse of Iohn against the Gothes. flyghte, wyth greate slaughter pursewed them, & at the first assault wonne Brunduse. Then hauinge reconciled the people of Calabre & broughte them again to fauour themperour, w t many faire promises made vnto thē, he departed from Brunduse, & after v. remouings came to Canusiū, the which town he also brought in subiectiō. Not far from Canusiū is y • vilage of Cannas, Canna [...]. where the notable battell was [Page 128] foughte betwene Hanniball and the Romaines. In this place one Tullian [...]he sonne of Uenant a man of greate name & authoritie amonge y e Lucans came to Iohn declaring to him that the Lucanes & Brutians had taken parte w t his enemyes not of theyr owne accord, but compelled by the displeasures doone to theym by the Imperialles. Wherefore yf the Emperour woulde entreate them frendly & gently, the peo ple wold willingly returne vnder his o bedience. Iohn loading him wyth commendations & thankes promised hym greate rewards, & afterwarde vsed his helpe to his great cōmoditie & furtheraunce. At such time as Totilas hard of Iohns approch, he sent a crewe of hys horsmen to Capua, commaunding thē to keepe themselues close wythin the walles, and to make no showe at all to theyr enemyes vntyll they were past, and then to followe the tayle of theyr host. What was to be done afterward he willed them to ca [...] y • care vpō [...]. [Page] This thing so greatly troubled, Iohn, that for feare he should be entrapped by his enemies, he left of his iourney toward Belisarius, & turned himselfe towarde the Brutians and Lucanes. There was amog the Brutians a cer taine Gothe, called Richemond sette there by Totilas w t an armie to kepe y • country in obedience, & to kepe the enterance betwene Scilla & Charibdis. Him did Iohn sodainly assaile, and at the first brunt put hym to flight, and af ter great slaughter receiued the rest y • wer [...] lefte togither w t their Captayne by composition. Herevpon al the Brutians & Lucanes reuolted from the Go thes to themperour. Whiles Iohn occupied himself in this sort, Belisarius loked daily for him & was wonderfull [...]ory for his long tariens, greatly blaminge Iohns cowardise, that he had not foughte againste the horsemen that were at Capua, inespecially seing that he hymselfe had so notable a band of Horsemen of the Hunnes.
[Page 129]whereby he myghte easily haue come through maug [...] his enemies heades, and neded not to haue turned backe agayne so shamefully. These and suche other thynges dyd Belisarius fynde faulte with. But it booted hym not to complayne, for Iohn had taken vp hys standyng in Appulia, and there determined to abyde, mynding nothing lesse then to goe to Rome. Belisarius therfore fearyng least the besieged shoulde thynke themselues abandoned, and through despaire shold chaunce to miscarry, determined to succour them by y • Tiber, for hys power was not so great that he was able to encounter with his enemyes vppon the land: and therefore he trusted rather to hys pollicie and to the riuer for the succoryng of y • towne. Uppon this thought he bestyrde hym & gate two hundred of those kind of shippes Belisarius p [...]o uision for the rescowyng of Rome. which the Grekes call Dromades, these shippes haue walles of timber on euery syde with loopes in places conueniente to let oute arrowes and other [Page] weapons at the [...]nemye. Agaynste the brydge and other thynges that were set to stoppe hym vppon the riuer, he [...] thys deuyse: he set two shyppes vpō the streame fastened surely together wyth barres & crowes of yron, vpon the same he buylded a tower of tymber somewhat hygher then the towers that wer buylded at the endes of the brydge by hys enemyes. Whē these thyngs were in a redinesse, he caused the Dromades to be fraughted with corne & other [...]uste nance to be conueyed to Rome, mannyng them with the stoutest and valiantest souldiers that he had. Cōmaundyng all the residue to goe on foote by the riuers syde, & to drawe the shyppes with the tower. With his nauie furnished & decked in thys wyse he set forwarde agaynst hys enemyes. He hymselfe enteryng into one of the Dromades sayled formest, and the reste followed hym in order, hys footemen also went by hym vpon the ry [...]er [...]. [Page 130] Furthermore he sente to Rome vnto Bessas, that he shoulde yssue out at the very same tyme & kepe the enemyes as much occupyed as he could. But Bessas dyd neyther that nor yet any thyng ells that was to any purpose during al that siege. B [...]lisarius nauie being decked in suche sorte as I haue tolde you, went vp the streame. Neyther dyd the Gothes mete them in any place, but kepte themselues quietly wythin theyr bulwarkes. When the [...] came nere y • brydge there they founde a trope of their enemyes and one [...] set at the tone end of the chayne, the whiche Belisarius souldiers wonne at y • [...] assault, & so takyng awaye the chayne proceded to the brydge. There began a curste fraye, the Gothes endeuoryng to defend the brydge, and the souldiers of Belisarius to wynne it. For y • Gothes yssuyng frō both y • towers at eche end of y • brydge, fought very valiantly. Agayne the souldiers driuyng the shyppes harde to the brydge, dyd beate the [Page] Gothes and woulde not suffer them to stand vpon it. In the meane while Belisarius caused the shyppes wherin the tower of tymber was, to be brought as nere the tower of his enemyes as could be. And when they came hard to it he commaunded the vessells of brimstone (whiche he had hanged in the toppe of hys tower for the same purpose before) to be set on fyre, and to be caste downe vppon the towre of hys enemyes, the which being done, the fyre lighting vppon the tower of hys enemyes, burned it vp and al the Gothes that wer within it. There were not lesse then two hundred that perished in y e fyre among whom was the Captayne of the holde hymselfe, such a man of hys handes as was not among all the Gothes agayn. Hereuppon the souldiers assayling the reast of the Gothes more boldely and [...]er [...]ly, compelled them to geue backe, wherby they wonne y e brydge, y e which forthwith they purposed to haue heauen downe, and with their whole flete [Page 131] to haue sayled to Rome. For there remayned not now any let in their waye, but that they myghte haue gone to the Citye and haue conueyed in the corne and all other necessaryes, to the greate renoune and commendation of Belisarius, whoe had deuised suche a nauie. But fortune (as it should scme) had determined Man purpoeth and God dysposeth. other wyse. For sodaynely there happened a▪ wonderful mischaūce (not by meanes of the enemye, but by hys owne men) which peruerted al hys deuises. The Gothes helde the City [...] Ostia which standeth on the lefte hand of Tyber by the sea syde ouer agaynst the whiche standeth the Citye Portua on the ryght hande of the riuer. When Belisarius set forth with hys nauie, he had lefte hys wyfe and al his househol [...] furniture in the sayd towne of Portua, and had appoynted as ruler thereof one Isaac a valiant gentleman and a trusty with a conuenient Crew of souldiers, commaundyng and hart [...]ly [...] him, that he would not for any chaunce [Page] or occasion, depart out of the towne but kepe hymselfe within it and defende it only: Now at such tyme as Belisarius had set hys enemyes tower on fyre (as we haue declared before) by & by ranne certayne to the towne of Portua, and whereas the victorie was notable of it selfe, they reported it farre greater then it was in dede. At the which tydinges Isaac leapyng for ioy [...] & exaltyng hymselfe in hys owne conceite, lyke a mad bedlem quite forgettyng what Belisarius had sayd vnto hym, commaunded hys men to arme themselues, & in thys sodayne heate & extasye wafting ouer hys men to inuade hys enemyes that kept their standyng on the other syde of the riuer, ranne vpon them not farre from the towne of Ostia. Through his sodayne assaulte at the fyrst encounter he put them to flyght. Howbeit anon after, hys enemies gatheryng themselues together and encouraging one an [...] other, returned eftsones vppon hym & hauyng slayne a great sorte of his souldiers, to coole hys [...]rye madnesse, toke [Page 132] hym prysoner. Immediatly hereupon certayne horsemen broughte worde to Belisarius that his enemies had taken Isaac prysoner. With y • which tydings Belisarius beyng stryken to the heart, demaunded not one worde of y • messā ger where or in what sort, but misconstruing that hys enemyes had taken Portua, and bene Lordes of hys wyfe & all that euer he had, he was sodaynly strycken with suche an inward sorrow, y • he was not able to speake. And thereupon turnyng backe agayne, he retyred with hys nauye & hys souldiers in all haste that myghte be, vtterly determynyng eyther to recouer y • towne while the matter was but newly begonne, & hys enemyes had yet scarcely settled thēselues, or els to die in y • battell. By this meanes y • victorie which he had as good as gottē [...]ypped out of his handes. But whē he came to Portua & sawe y • towne [...]afe & himself deceaued through light credite & mistaking of y • message, he toke so great sorrowe for it, y • he fell sicke and was fayne to keepe hys bed [Page] and besydes that, he was taken with a sore and daungerous feuer, which held hym long tyme ere he coulde be ryd of The worthie rewarde of wilsul rashenesse. it. Isaac the author of all this mischiefe was by the commaundement of Totilas put to death in prison, in reuengement of the death of Rodericke Captayne of the garryson, whiche had dyed of a wound taken in the foresaid battel. For by thys tyme had Totilas quyte chaunged that gentlenesse whiche he had pretended in the begynnyng of hys reigne, into statelynesse and crueltie. Uerely eyther bycause his prosperous succeste made hym forget hymselfe, or ells because hys gentlenesse beyng but [...]eined at the begynning, could not continue. I assure you [...]e would speake so bitterly of y e people of Rome, y • the very terror therof was an occasion that they endured the famyne more obstinately then they would haue done, because euery man was afrayed of hys outrageous The miserable estate of Rome. crueliye. Therfore as long as euer there was any hope of helpe at Belisarius [Page 133] ha [...]d, the people of Rome beyond their power & (to say the truth) beyond y • bondes of manhode and nature, endured the famyn. For to omit other thynges, euen the fleshe of horses, asses, and mules were deynty [...] delicates at that tyme in Rome, they thoughte they had sped well that coulde get either dogges or myce or such other vncleane beastes to fede on: Othersome wer glad to eate all kynde of herbes, euen suche as the brute beastes would not haue touched, and diuerse lyued by rootes and barkes of trees. But when they sawe there was no hope of helpe, then turnyng to teares and lamentation, some fordyd themselues, and some stealyng out in y • night attempted to deceaue the watche of their enemies. Many also [...]arued for hunger and want of foode within their own houses, & neuer came out of their dores. While the Citye stoode in thys lamentable and piteous estate, foure Rome is betrayed. Isaurien souldiers conspyred to be tray it to the enemye these souldiers warded [Page] at the gate Celimontana, cōmonly called Asinaria, whoe after the tyme they were fully resolued vpō the matter, did let thēselues downe the wall by a lyne, & went strayght vnto Totilas promysyng to betraye y • Citye into his ha [...]ds. Totilas encouragyng them with promyse of great rewardes, sent certayne of [...] men with thē to view the place & to conūder whyther the thyng they had promysed, were possible to be done or no. The Isaurians leadyng thē to the walles went vp agayne in their syghte by the [...]ame lyne that they flided down. And so whē the experience of the matter had geuē sufficient credit, Totilas at y • nyght appoynted to the accōplyshment of the myschiefe, cōmaunded hys hoste to be readie in armour about him by one of the clocke after mydnyghte. The whiche beyng done, he sent certayne of his men before to get vp by the lyne, and he hymselfe followyng closely after with the reast of hys armye, stayed a lyttle from the gate. They that [Page 134] were sente by Totilas, were according to couenante beetwene hym and the [...]raytours, drawen vp the walles, from whence they proceeded forthwith to the gate and with axes cut it open. Totilas hauyng by thys meanes entered into Rome, kept hys armye still, about hym at the gate, not sufferyng any of hys men to ronne into the Citye, but kept them together wyth hym vntyll it was daye, Sodaynly there sprang a noyse aboute that parte of the towne, that the ene [...]ie was gotten within the walles, & thereupon ensued a wonderfull feare euery mā begynnyng to flye, Suche as fled wente out at those gates that were farthest frō the place where y e enemy entered. Many also both of the nobilitie and of the commonalty toke sanctuarye in the Churches. Assone The sackyng of Rome. as it was daye the enemyes ranne through all the Citie, and wythout any respect slewe as many as came in their waye.
[Page]Totilas marching frō Lateran where he had stode al nyght, went through the Citye to Saint Peters as it had bene to performe hys vowe, accompanied with traynes of most cruell and bloudy butchers, which with their naked swordes bathed in bloud, slewe all that euer came in their way without regarde of any person. Hauyng in this sorte swept through the myddest of the Citye from the one end to the other, when he came into the Uaticane vnto the portche of Saint Peters, Pelagius of whom we Pelagius maketh supplication for hys Citizens. made mention before, fearing to approche into presence, rauished in y • apparell accustomed in solemne ceremonyes, and holdyng the Testamente of Christ in hys hande, kneled humblye downe on hys knees, & sayd: O kyng I besieche thee spare thy humble suppliantes. At that worde Totilas dysdaynfully caste a proud loke vpon hym, saying: commest thou nowe to me Pelagius to make supplication? Yea euen nowe (ꝙ Pelagius) sithens it is the wil [Page 135] of God to make thee Lorde & Master ouer me. And therfore my soueraine Lord haue mercy vpon thy seruaunts. Therwithall y • wrath of Totilas was assuaged, insomuche that he made proclamation y • frō thenceforth there shold not any person be strickē with y e sword but that there should be respecte from slaughter & bloudshed. Moreouer he gaue cōmaundement, that no gentlewoman were she mayde, maryed, wife or wydowe, should be defyled, y • which he caused to be obserued with great seueritie. Onely the goodes of the Romaynes he gaue for a pray to hys souldiers, g [...]uyng strayght charge that no mā should be so bolde as to touch their bodyes. Then myndyng to pull down the courages of the Gothes, puffed vp with pryde for thys victorye, he somoned them together the next day & made this oration vnto them. Is there any of The [...] of Totilas to hys men of warre. you my companions in armes (ꝙ he) that beholdyng so great alterations as haue chaūced within these fewe yeres, [Page] dreadeth not the frayltye of mannes estate? And is not able to coni [...]ure whereupon and wherefore all these alterations & chaunges haue happened? I wyll not speake of Rome, somtyme the Ladye of the whole worlde, whiche now is fallen into your hands. For she hath suffered many myschaūces which were done so longe a goe that they are not nowe to be recounted, and thys is not the fyrst ruine that hath happened vnto her. Wherefore I had rather put you in remembraunce of our owne affayres. What thyng was there of grater power and strength before these warres, then the nation of the Gothes through out all Italy? It sent into the field two hundred thousande fyghtyng men, throughly furnyshed wyth armour, weapons, artillerye, horses, victualles, golde and syluer. It helde in possession all Italye, Sicill, Corsica, Sardinia, and Dalmatia. Who would haue beleued it had bene possible for [Page 136] [...] thousande Grekes (for there came no mo into Italy at the fyrst) to haue subuerted so great a power? And what shall we say of the same Gr [...]kes: when they had in manner brought all in subiection to them: and helde all as Lordes and conquerers? woulde any man haue thought that you beyng but a fewe and broughte almoste to beggerye, shoulde haue recouered Italy out of the handes of them beyng twentye thousand men, con [...]eryng that at that tyme ye were not able to make aboue foure thousand horsemen? and had not a towne lefte you in all Italy, more then Pauye Ueron, & Now [...] Treuizo. Taruisium? woulde any man haue thought that eyer ye shoulde haue taken Rome the head of the worlde? the whiche Uitigis was not able to subdue with hys two hundred thousand mē in a whole yeres besiegement? Surely countrymē these thynges are very great and not a lyttle to be wondered at.
[Page]How beit if we liste to consider & [...] then [...], the causes of these alterations are most manifest & apparant. For as long as the Gothes executed Iustice & vsed equitye, so long their power florished, their [...]state prospered, their matters went forward, & whatsoeuer they toke in hand had good successe. But as sone as they wer once l [...]d awry through couetousnesse, then bred there preuye grudge among them, thē rose there inwarde debate, then one soughte to cut anothers throte, then sprang vp secret treason, through y • which they brought themselues to vtter ruine & decaye. Agayne whē these contagious maladies were passed out of you into y • captaines of Iustinian, through your amendement you easily ouercame thē. Wherfore yf you wey & consider these thyngs wel, ye haue no cause at al to be proude of thys victorie, but rather oughte to dread God & to feare the mutabilitie of fortune. For ye must vnderstand that all Empire & power is easily forgone, [Page 137] [...]lesse they be maintayned by Iustice pollicie, and paynestakinge. Yea my companions in armes, know ye this & beleue it for a certainetie, that the grea test parte of your labour is yet behind. For it is a harder matter to kepe thinges gotten, then to gette them, For as muche as in gettinge often [...]ymes the cowardnes of the possessour furthereth a man more then his owne prowesse. But to kepe thynges gotten, no man is able without his own prowesse and pollicie. Thus muche spake [...]las at that tyme & the Gothes dyd greatlye commende the wysedome of theyr Kynge.
¶ The. xii. Chapter.
¶ The [...] wordes of Totilas to the [...], and [...] of a noble woman accused of [...]. [...] se [...]th Ambassadours with letters to the Emperour, at whose returne he defaceth Rome and [...]eth it vtterly desolate.
[Page]AFter this he called the Romaines before him and greatlye reproued The talke of [...]otilas to the Romaynes. their vnthankefullnesse & misdemeanour. In as much as they being in subiection vnder Odoacer, & delyuered from his tiranny by meanes of Theoderich & the Gothes, at whose handes they had receiued so great benefites as they theym selues coulde scarce haue wyshed, through the whyche they had bene greatly enriched & had lyued many▪ yeres in great tranquillitle, ryghte happye yf they coulde haue sene when they were well, now in the ende wythout any wronge or displeasure offered to them, had contrarye to their othe & allegeans reuolted to the Grekes, men of all other most vaine & withoute eyther manhood or prowesse. Who immediatly vpon their arriuall being besieged by Uitigis, durst neuer she we th [...] h [...]ades in the open field, but lu [...] king within walls and there staruing themselues for hunger, aboode all the dishonour that might be. Who after [Page 138] the tyme they were made lordes of the Cities, not through their owne man hoode, but through treason & deceyte, [...]ylled all places wyth tollgatherers, Pollers, and Promooters: who wyth maruelous crueltye compelled the Cityes & people of Italye to the payment of those tributes, whiche had bene forgeuen them & clear [...]ly released manye yeres before by Theoderich & thother Kynges of the Gothes. Who to satisfie the insatiable couetousnesse of the Emperour their Master, called as well the people as the magistrates, to a straight accompt of such thynges, as they had taken charge of vnder the said kings. Tell me therfore ye Romaines (ꝙ he) whether ye euer suffered anye harme by the Gothishe Kinges? And tell me againe if e [...]er these Greklings dyd you anye good? And not rather more displeasure to you beynge theyr frends, then to vs their enemies? A vicious & wicked kinde of people, able to serue to no purpose, but to forginge of [Page] leasinges? whereas on the contrarye part the Gothes were borne & brought vp amonge you in Italye, and yet you haue set more by straungers & aliens then by your owne countryemen & acquaintance, so much are ye degenerated out of kind, hating whom ye ought to loue, desyring new thyngs & lothing your owne quietnesse, like restie iades which through ouer long standinge in & to much pampering become coltishe & full of euil touches. Wherfore seing you haue done these thinges both contrarye to your dutye & allegeance, and contrarye to your owne profyte, looke as you haue hytherto bene worthelye punnis [...]ed, so shall you also be hereafter. Wyth these wordes he dismissed the Romaynes voyde of all good hope. About the same tyme was pleaded the A noble woman accused for defacing the kynges ymages. case of a noble woman called Iustiniana. It was laid to her charg y • she had caused y • images of kinge▪ Theoderich to be broken & defaced in reuengemēt of her husband Bo [...]tius and of her father [Page 139] Symmachus whom Throderich had put to death. The endit [...]ent for defating of y • Images was supposed to be true. Howebeit she was thought [...] to be helde excused, in asmuch as her Iust sorrow prouoked her therunto, for bicause it was manifest lye knowē that those worthy personages, were wrongfully put to death. In consideration whereof. Totilas acquited the woman, & preserued her from the violence of the Gothes. Afterward he purposed to sende an Ambassade to Iustinian. The A [...]bassadours were An Ambassad sent from rotilas to them perour. the forenamed Pelagius, & one Theodore an Orator of Roine. These men dyd Totilas byn [...]e wyth a great othe▪ to doe hys mess [...]ge faithfullye, and to retourne to hym into Italye wyth as muche spede as myghte be. The effect of their comission was, to declare vnto themperour y • if he wold admit hym & the gothes into the nū [...]er of his frends he wold saue the citie [...] Rom [...], & wold more [...]uer a [...] him w t a strōg power like [Page] [...] faithfull frend in all his voyages and warres. But yf he would rather continue warres against them, he would make Rome euen wyth the grounde. For he mynded not to trouble himself wyth the keeping of it whyle he should be occupied aboute other warres, nor yet to leaue it vppe to hys enemyes.
Furthermore he wrate a letter to Iustinian, the tenour whereof was thys. The tenour of [...]otilas let ter to themperour. What hathe bene d [...]one aboute the Citye of Rome I thynke you knowe well ynoughe. The occasion why we send Ambassadours vnto you is thys. We couet to be at attonement wyth you, and you wyth vs, lyke as were oure noble predecessours Anastasius the Emperour of Rome and Theoderich Kinge of the Gothes. Whose mutuall concorde & agreement both caused great tranquillitye and quietnesse of those tymes, and also greatlye benefited themselues. If therefore you can fynde in your harte to dooe as they dyd, I wyll worthelye accepte you fo [...] [Page 140] my parent, and you shall haue me and my Gothes at commaundement to helpe you in all your warres. But y [...] you be otherwyse mynded, you shall vnderstande by oure Ambassadours what shall be the sequele. Wyth thys message the Ambassadours sayled into Grece, durynge whose goyng and commynge Totilas aboode styll at Rome. Belisarius laye all the whyle at Portua, broughte to deathes doore wyth syckenesse and sorrowe. In the meane tyme John persisted in hys doinges, & altered many thyngs among the Lucanes and Brutians. By meanes whereof Totilas also was compelled to sende amonge the Lucanes and to renewe the warre. It was not long after but that he was certifyed of the Emperours answere. For at suche Themperours aunswere to the demands of Totilas, tyme as the Ambassadours commyng before Iustinian had fyrste delyuered the kynges letters, and afterwarde declared their Commission, makynge intercession and supplicatiō for sauing [Page] the Citie of Rome then standing in so great ieoperdie, they coulde gette non [...] other aunswere at themperours hand but that Belisarius was in Italy, to whose will and discretion he had commytted the affayres of that countrye. When Totilas heard that perceiuing it was don for none other purpose then to disappoynt him of his desyre, & more ouer takinge displeasure at Iohns doinges whiche had made warre vppon him sytting still in quiet & abyding for the returne of his Ambassadours sent to entreate for peace, he toke counsell The vtter sac king and desolation of Rome. to rase the Citie of Rome. Where vpon rising vp with [...]aruelous crueltye in sundrye places [...] beate the walles downe to the grounde, to the mountenance of the third part of the Circuit of the whole Citie. That done he set the Capitoll on fire. All was on a lyght [...] fire about the market, about Subura, & about y e holy strete. The hil [...] lis smoked, the hill Auentine glistered with flames & the noyse of the fallinge [Page 141] of the houses was heard euery where. While the Citie was thus burninge, thin habitantes wyth their wyues and children, were throwen out of their na tiue soyle, hauing not so much libertie as to be waile their owne miseries. All the people and the common sort he dispersed throughe the townes of Campanie. But he kepte still aboute hym the Senatours and noble men for hostages. After this he departed oute of Rome with all hys whole armie, leauing it vtterly disolate, in so muche that there remayned not anye man or woman in it.
The fourth booke of Leonard Aretine, concernyng the warres in Italy against the Gothes.
❧ The first Chapter,
¶Totilas chaseth Iohn Vitalian from place to place▪ Belisarius repaireth Rome and geueth notable and blody repulses to the Gothes attemptyng to let him of hys purpose, and prouideth for the saufe keping of the same.
WHen Totilas departed frō rome, he set a crew of souldiers against the citie Portua in a place called Algidone, to the entēt that Belisarius souldters shuld not worke any thing in his absence, & The shamful flight of iohn Vitalian. with the reste of his armie he went againste Iohn into Calabre. As sone as Iohn heard of his comminge, he abandoned vppe al vnto him and ranne [...]ys waye lyke a toward, not stayinge [Page 142] in any place vntill he had recouered to Hydrunt whiche is the furthest towne of all Calabrie. By meanes whereof when Totilas came in those quarters, he quickelye recouered the Lucanes, Brutians, and Calabrians. whollye sauynge Hydrunt. The same s [...]ason Spolet reuolted from the Gothes.
There was nothynge keept of it but onelye the Castle, for Totilas had be fore tyme ouerthrowen the walles o [...] the Towne. The authour of thys reuolting was one Martian of Constantinople, who beyng one of the kepers, conspyred wyth eyghtene of the soutdyers, and hauynge slayne the Captayne of the piece, yelded it vppe to Be lisarius. Aboute the same tyme almoste The repairing of tarent was Tarent repayred, whereas before, it had beene forsaken and lefte desolate. It was repayred by the Calabrians and other people that were driuen out of theyr owne dwellynges by the warres. They were not able to build it of like bignes as it had bene [Page] in tymes paste. But takynge one [...] of it buttynge vppon the hauen enclosed on bothe sydes wyth the sea, they easely fortified the accesse vnto it from the mayne lande. Totilas hauynge brought vnder hys subiection all the townes of Lucanye and Calabrie sauynge Hydrunt, determyned to departe thence, and therevppon leauynge agarryson of souldyers at the Cytye Atheruse, wyth the reste of hys armye marched▪ towarde Rauenna, In the meane whyle Belisarius beynge recouered of hys longe contynewed Agew, tooke in hande a bolde aduenture, and (as manye a manne woulde haue thought) a rashe, the whyche notwyth [...]andynge in the end [...] proued a couragious and laudable enterpryse. He determyned to take vppon the sodayne and to fortifye the Cytye of Rome lyinge at that tyme waste and desolate. Whervppon kepyng The repai [...]g of Rome by Belisarius. thys purpose secrete to hymself, he lefte a fewe Souldyers at Portua [Page 143] for defenc [...] of the towne, & wyth al the power he could make besyde, (no man eyther of hys owne or of hys enemies mistrustinge whereaboutes he went) tooke the Cytye of Rome and wyth a wonderfull [...] wente in hand wyth repayringe and fortifyinge it agayne. And bycause the walles in diuers places were beaten downe to the hard grounde, he fylled vppe parte of theym wyth roughe worke, and cut deepe [...]yches before the walles, and caste vppe a Rampyre the whyche he fensed wyth Trunkes of trées fastened in the ground by the rootes wound one wyth in another, wyth the sharp [...] endes vpwarde. And for the mor [...] strengthe of the wall newelye repayred he buylded towers and bulwa [...] of timber. The whych things through the earnest labour and willyngnes o [...] hys souldyers, he furnyshed it in thr [...] and twentye dayes. And shyppes came contynuallye from Portua loden with corne and other [...].
[Page]The Citizens of Rome whereof there stayed a greate number in the townes nere aboutes, hearynge that their Citye was repayred, were wonderfull desyrous to retourne into theyr natiue Countrye, and that inespeciallye bycause there was plentye of corne there, wyth scarcetie whereof they were pinched in other places. As sone as Totilas had worde of thys, forthwyth all other matters sette a parte, he made haste towarde Rome. Belisarius was not able to hange vppe the gates of the Citye before hys enemyes were come. For he had not so good store of Carpenters to repaire them in so short tyme. The Gothes the fyrste daye of theyr commynge encamped themselues not farre from the Citye agaynste the gate Salaria. The nexte mornyng by the rysing of the sunne, wyth great noyse and hurly burlye they marched to the assaulte. Belisarius placed all The Gothes assault Rome and are repulsed. hys tallest and hardyest men at y • gate the rest he set vpon the walles & in the [Page 144] bulwarkes, commaundynge them to beate theyr enemyes downe. The encounter was vehement and whote on bothe partes. For the Gothes came thyther of sette purpose to haue wonne the Towne at the fyrste pushe. But when they sawe better defence made then they looked for, they were in such a furye and suche a rage, that they ranne desperatly vppon theyr enemies lyke madde men, and stryuinge vnaduisedlye to gette vppe, were beaten downe and kylled wythoute mercye. It was wonder to see howe earnestlye and desperatlye it was foughte on bothe sydes that daye. For the assault beganne in the mornynge and ended not vntyll nyghte. After that it waxed darcke the Gothes retyred into theyr Tentes. But the souldyers of Belisarius partelye kepte theyr standynge vppon the walles and bulwarkes as they had beene placed by hym, and partelye warded at the Gates.
[Page]And to the entent the enemye should not sodaynely comme vppon theym in the night and take theym vnwares, he caused a greate sorte of Busshes and Brambles to be layde before the Gates. The nexte daye the Gothes approched to the Cytye in lyke sorte as they had doone before, and Belisarius and hys men made lyke resistens. But when the assaulte waxed to longe, the souldyers that kepte theyr standynge at the Gate, yssued oute boldelye and encounteryng wyth the Gothes hand to hand, at length putte theym to flyghte on that syde and wyth manye woundes draue theym farre from the Gate. And so was that assaulte ended. Afterwarde when they hadde bestowed manye dayes in healinge theyr woundes and repayrynge theyr armour, the Gothes aduaunced agayne to the assaulte of the Cytye.
[Page 145]Belisarius hauyng before well harted A notable repulse geuen to the [...] by Belisarius. and encouraged hys souldiers, leauing neuerthelesse a cōuenient number vppon the walles and in the Towers, led thē out at the gate. There was a whot and an eager battell fought hard at the gate, in the which when as Totilas his standerdbearer was strickē starke dead from hys horse with a speare, and the standerd ouerthrowē, there was much preasyng aboute it frō both sydes. The Gothes striuyng to saue their standerd l [...]aste they shoulde be dyshonored, and y • souldiers of Belisarius endeuoring to obtayne the honour of wynnyng the same. At laste the skyrmishe grewe to thys issue, that the Gothes recouered their standard, & the souldiers of Belisarius had the bodye of the standardbearer, sauyng his lyft hand which the Gothes dyd cut of for spyght that their enemyes shoulde not haue it, bycause there was a ring of golde vpon it. This done, Totilas perceauyng that his attempt was in vayne, blewe to y • retreit [Page] and the nerte daye after wente hys waye vnto Tybur. For as I tolde you before he helde that Citye, and hauing maruelou [...]y forti [...]d the castle thereof vsed it as a Camp agaynste the Romaynes. The Romaynes to the entent they woulde not bee molested by their sodayne inuations from that syde, brake all the brydges on the ryuer Anio. Thys ryuer Anio spryngeth amonge the Heruices, and ronnyng downe from the hylles cutteth the playne betwene Tybur and Rome. It hath verye stepe bankes, and the chanell is so deepe of water that it cannot be passed. And therefore there were brydges made vppon it from all the pryncipall wayes, as from the gates Salaria, Nomentana, and Tiburtyne. These brydges beyng at that tyme cut of, there coulde no rodes be made a gaynst the Citie of Rome on that syde.
The, ii. Chapte [...]
¶ After the dep [...]e of the Gothes from Rome. Totilas in the nexte spring goeth to the syege of Peruse, duryng whp [...] beyng there, Iohn [...] attempteth many thin ges in Cāpane to the great p [...]eiudice of the Gothes, wherewith [...]las being displeased goeth with suche speede agaynst hym that he ouercame hym before he heard of hys commyng. The Emperour sendeth another [...]ande of men into Italye at who [...] commyng. Belisarius sayling towarde Tarent is driuen by tempeste to land at Croton where for wante of forage compelled to sende hys horsemen into the Countrye, through the negligence of the Cap [...]nes looseth them. By meanes whereof he is fayneto sayle a [...]aye into Sicill, during the which his absence Totilas besiegeth Ruscie.
AFTER the departure of the Gothes Belisarius caused the gates and the yron worke of them to be framed quietly, and when he had done, as thoughe he had conquered the Citye agayne by force, he [...] [Page] [...] [Page 146] [...] [Page] the keyes of it into Grece to the Emperoure Iustinian. And thus ended the twelueth yeare of thys warre. The nexte yeare following assone as the spryng came, Totilas set out of Tibur & marched towarde Pe [...]use. The same Towne was euen then alreadye besieged by another companye of the Gothes. And when corne beganne to waxe scarce & other victualles to fayle, Totilas went thyther to the entent to kepe the towne strayghter, & to take awaye al hope of succour from the besieged. Whyle Totilas was occupyed about the siege of Peruse, Iohn takyng The doyngs of Iohn in [...]. a vantage of hys beyng ther [...] & perceauyng that the Senators & noble men of Rome which Totilas had led prisoners wyth him were left in the townes of Campane vnder the kepyng of hys souldiers, thought to wynne hymselfe a name by deliuering them out of their enemyes handes. Whereuppon he remoued out of Calabrie with a trope of [...]hosen horsemen, neuer dyscontinuing [Page 147] his sournye night nor day vntil he cam [...] into Campane. Totilas mistrusting as much, had appoynted a strong band of the Gothes thither. Whē they cam [...] vnto Minturne they stayed & s [...]nt certayne of their horsemen before to see what was done in the townes. Now it fortuned that the Gothyshe horsemen whiche were sente before, chaunced to lyght vppon Iohn & hys horsemen, betwene whō there was a sharpe encoū ter. In the which Iohn gettyng the vpper hand slewe many of them & wounded many, and put the reaste to flyght. Through this discomfiture they that a bode behynde at Minturne were so discouraged, y t they sled also. By meanes wherof Iohn had leysure to lead away whom he lysted at hys pleasure. For y • townes of Campaine wer vnwalled the Gothes hauyng lately before beatē them downe. So that Iohn toke all the Romayne prisoners that he founde in euery towne & deliuered them out of y • h [...]ndes of the Gothes, conueying them [Page] quyte awaye, all sauyng Clementine & Orestes of the which the one woulde not go away with hym, bycause he feared the Emperour whom he had offended, & the other makyng excuse that he wanted horses, taried in doubt whither he might go or no. Howbcit there were not Many Senatours founde in Campaine, but very many of their wyues & daughters. For the men for the moste part the same nyght that the Citie was taken, followed the men of warre and fled with them to Portua. When Totilas vnderstode of these thynges that Iohn had done, he was greatly mou [...]d, det [...]rminyng to be reuenged vpō him. And therupō leauing part of his army The great ce leritie of Totilas. at y • siege of Peruse, he himselfe w t the residue, made haste by great iourneyes through y • coūtries of y • Picentes Marses, & P [...]ligues, into Appulia, & neuer ceased, vntill, by crossyng the wayes at length he foūde Iohn in Calabrie wher sodainly setting vpon him, he put him & al his army to flight & toke hys tentes. [Page 148] Notwythstandyng as it chaunced, the Gothes made no greate slaughter, by reasō it was nighte whē they assailed y • camp. By meanes wherof y • souldiers did easily escape & hide thēselues in the next moūtaines. Iohn & Arnulphc captaine of y e Erulians who also serued in y • warres with Iohn, recouered out of y e chace vnto Hidrunt, & the souldiers afterward some one way & some another resorted thither vnto thē. Thys victorie of Totilas dyd greatlye renoune hys name. For it was thought to be a notable matter, for a king to haue come frō y • walles of Peruse into Calabrie, and y • in so shorte space as a light iournying man could scarcely haue done, hymself beyng not caryed in a horselytter or a charyte, but euen wyth as much paine as the common souldier, on horsebacke laden with hys harnesse as other were. Not longe after that battell, another bande of souldiers sent from Iustinian beganne to approche vnto Hydrunt.
[Page]For the Emporour being moued with Themperour fēdeth a new power into Italy. often letters from Belisarius, declaryng y e state of the warres & requesting ayde, determined to send a new power into Italy, & had written to Belisarius that he shoulde hye hym into Calabrie to receaue his souldiers & to make war agaynst hys enemyes there. Captaines of thys new armye were Ualerian leader of the Armenians, & Uere leader of the Erulians. Belisarius vppon the receipt of the Emporours letters and cōmaundement, leauyng the reaste of hys armye at Rome & at Portua vnder y • charge & gouernement of his Lieuetennant Conon, with nyne hundred chosen souldiers, (whereof seuen hundred were horsemen and two hundred fotemen) toke shippyng & made sayle to ward Calabre. It was hys mynde to haue landed hys armye at Tarent, the which is two daies iourney dystant frō Hydrunt, & in the same place to haue assembled al the reast of his power about hym. But by meanes of cōtrary winds [Page 149] he was compelled to land hys men in the hauen of Croton. For the violence of the tempest was suche, that he could sayle neyther backeward nor forward. Therefore when he had landed hys army at Croton, forasmuch as there was not plentye of forage in those quarters, he was constrayned to seperate hys horsemen from hys fotemen. For he hymself & his wyfe abode with his fotemē at Croton, to the entent to cal Iohn with the reast of hys power vnto hym, & commaunded hys horsemē to go further into the countrie and to stay themselues in the borders of the Turnies. For in so doyng they shuld easely come by al thyngs necessarye for themselues and for their horses, and should also be out of all daunger, forasmuche as the mountaynes of Lucanie sho [...]yng into the countrye of the Brutians, do make two valleyes, with narrowe enterances into them. And not farre from one of the valleyes standeth on the sca coast [...] Castel of the Turnies called Ruscie, [Page] a little aboue the whiche is the towne somwhat further from the water, situate on a high grounde, called Ruscian. The same towne did Iohn kepe with a strong garryson of souldiers. Belisarius therfore sent his souldiers. into those borders, & made Captaynes ouer them one Phases a Spanyard a noble man of warre, & Barbation a Thracian, cō maundyng them in any wyse to keepe Ski [...] betwene the im periall & Gothishe horsemen. well the entrances of y • valleyes. Whē these horsemen were come into those quarters, by chaunce they met with y • horsemē of their enemies, whō Totilas had sent to attempt y • towne which (as I tolde you before) was kept by Iohns mē of warre. After it came to y • encoun ter the souldyers of Belisarius albeit they wer fewer in number, yet they easily ouercame their enemyes & slewe aboue two hundred of thē. Afterwards those y • abode styll in that place, forasmuch as they wer the victours, and far frō the sight of their captaine, kept neyther order nor aray. But straying farre [Page 150] from their standarde they passed not to kepe either watch or ward, or to send any skowtes abrode, or to haue any skow tes among thē, nor yet to kepe y • streigh tes at the entrance of the valley where they might easily haue kept out their enemie. Whereof when Totilas had Belisarius loseth his horse men through neglegence of the captaines. vnderstanding he wente thyther with three thousand horsemen and set vppon thē ere they mystrusted any such thing. For he was passed those narrowe streightes and the entrances of the valleye, before that Belisarius horsemen heard of hys commyng. Hereuppon beganne a great slaughter and discomfiture to be made of them. Pha [...]s and Barbation were the Captaynes. Of the whiche Phases wyth hys troope of horsemen settyng hymselfe agaynste Totilas, dyd maruelis in Armes, how [...]eit at the lengthe he and all hys men were slayne. Barbation wyth no mo but two companions onely escaped by [...]yghte, the reast were eyther slayne or taken prisoners.
[Page]Some there were that taking themselues to flyghte at the fyrst begynnyng, escaped to Belisarius & caryed hym tydynges of that great slaughter. When Belisarius had lost hys horsemen, misstrustyng that hys enemies wold come agaynst hym, he toke shypping in haste & greatly dismaide with sorrowe, abandonyng himselfe to the windes arriued the same daye at Messaua in Sicill the which is from Croton about fourescore myles. Totilas hauyng dyspatched Totilas besie geth Ruscian. these matters & therby disposed y • power of hys enemyes, determyned to besiege y e towne of Ruscian. For in that towne wer three hundred horsemē placed there by Iohn, & an hundred fotemē sent lately thither by Belisarius. More ouer there were a great number of Italians both horsemen & fotemē, which if they shoulde be besieged, it was none other lyke but y • they should want victualles ere it were long. In hope wher of Totilas besieged the towne.
The. iii. Chapter.
¶ Conon Captayne of Rome is slayne of hys owne souldiers. Fortune afflicteth the Imperials, Totilas receaueth Ruscie & putteth Colaser Captay ne therof to death. Antonia the wyfe of Belisarius entreateth the Emporour that her housbande is called home out of Italy.
ABout thys tyme, the souldiers that Conon Captain of Rome for hys couetousnesse is slayne of hys ownsould [...] Belisarius lefte at Rome, slewe their Captayne Conō in a rage bicause that by encroching the corne priuely into hys hand, he dayly raysed the pryce of the market. Upon the which facte they sent their messengers to y • Emperour for pardō of their trespasse asserteining hym that onlesse he would graunt it, & moreouer paye them their wages that was behinde. they wold deliuer Rome vnto Totilas. For feare wherof the Emperour graunted them their whole request. They that were besieged at y • towne Ruscian, being dystressed wyth scarcetieof corne, [...]l to communicatiō [Page] with Totilas, & toke a truce for a fewe dayes, promising to yelde vp the towne onlesse they were rescowed in y e ▪ meane tyme. Hereupon was preparatiō made by Iohn, to rescowe them, & by Totilas to prohibite hym. In the meane season Belisarius was come out of Sicill, vnto Hydrunt & had receaued Ual [...]rian with the souldiers sent from the Emperour, by meanes wher of he had a sufficient power. Neyther wanted he shippes to conuey them into the rescowe of hys complices. Therfore when al thinges The pe [...]rse fortune of the i [...]perialls. were in a readinesse he embarked hys souldyers and fayled toward Ruscie. They that were besyeged seing the nauye a farre of, (for the Citie standeth vpon a hygh ground & hath a large prospect into the sea) were so glad of it that they wolde not render the towne at the daye appoynted. It was not long after but that there rose suche a tempeste that it desposed the nauye into sundrye places. The whyche afterwarde metyng all at Crot [...]n, set outa gayne [Page 152] from thence and made sayle to Ruscie. When the shyppes approched nere the lande, Totilas commaunded hys men to arme them, & set thems [...]ues in aray vpon the shore willing them with their dartes & arrowes to prohibit [...] the nauye from arriuall. When the Grekes sawe that, they were so sore afrayed of the daunger, that after they had houered a whyle their aboutes making pretence to arriue, at length despairyng to do that they came for, they turned their shyppes & went their wayes. Afterwarde as they were consultyng what was to be done for the safegarde of thē that were besyeged, it was determined t [...]t Iohn & Ualerian with y • horsemen & the reast of the armye shoulde go into the countrye of Picene, & there kepe as greate a styre as they coulde, to the entent that Totilas should be cōpelled to breake vp his siege to succour hys own: And that Belisarius shoulde wyth hys nauye sayle vnto Rome, to appease the mutime amonge the souldyers [Page] that we spake of before, & to carry corne thither to victual the towne. According to thys determination, Iohn went by & by through Appulia and the Countrye of the Marses to the Picentes by land. Ualerian chose rather to goe by water? And so hauing embarked his souldiers he arriued at Aucona, & ioyned hymself with Iohn. Yet not withstanding for al thys Totilas dyssolued not hys syege, but sending two thousand horsemen among the Picentes to defend y e townes agaynst Iohn and Ualerian, he himself with the reast of hys armye continued hys syege about Ruscian. The besyeged when victualles vtterly fayled thē, & that there remayned no hope of restowe, sent one Deofer an Italian and Godilas a Thracian to Totilas, desyryng pardon and safetye of their liues. These men contrary to their expectation found Totilas gentle and easye to be entreated. For he imputed y e breach of the truce to no man but one with the punnishment of whom he sayd he wold [Page 153] be satisfied, & was contented to pardon all the residue. If they woulde serue hym they should kepe still all that euer they had, and yf they had rather goe some where elles they should departe euery man wyth one garmēt. By this meanes he receyued the town, and after The punishment of Col [...] ser for breaking of promyse. that he had caused Colaser Captayne of the garryson to be whipped & mangled, (who was the occasion that the towne was not yelded accordinge to couenant), he commaunded hym to be putte to death. Wyth the rest he keept touch accordyng to hys promise. A great number of the men of warre (to the entent to saue that they had) abode still wyth Totilas. Othersome leauing theyr horse harnesse & all that they had besydes, went luyth one garment vnto Croton. The goodes of the townesmen Totilas gaue for a praye to hys souldyers, commaundynge The wyse of Belisarius goeth to constanginopls. theyr bodyes to goe at lybertye. About thys tyme Antonia the wyfe of Belisarius went to Cōstantinople [Page] to sue to Theodora the Empresse to entreate that her husband mighte be called home out of Italy. But when she found that Theodora was deceased a lyttle before, she went to themperour her selfe and with muche sute earnestly entreated hym that her husband mighte be called oute of Italye. The whyche request she easely obtayned, so muche the rather bycause the Emperour stoode in greate feare of warres in Parthia. Thus Belisarius Belisarius is called out of Italye. beyng called out of Italy returned into Grece almost fyue yere after he came thyther last, not hauing had altogyther so good fortune in thys hys latter viage as he had in hys fyrste.
At his departure from Rome he lefte three thousande of chosen souldyers there in garryson vnder y • gouernance of his Liuetenant Diogenes a man of much wisdome & knowledge in feates of armes. Anon after his departing y • Gothes toke by assault Peruse, which they had so long tyme beseged.
[...] The. iiii. Chapter.
❧ Totilas besegeth Rome nowe the thyrde time, great sute is made to themperour for re [...]cowing the same, Diogenes captayne therof prouideth pollitiquelly and circum spectly for the saufty of it, neuertheles itis [...] & taken, Diogenes flyeth to cent mueels, Paule another of themperours cap taines saueth him selfe and his valiantlye, being besyeged by the gothes in the Pyle of Adrian. Totilas endeuoreth by all meanes to repaire and frequent Rome againe, and afterward sommon [...]th centmucelles which taketh truce wyth hym to yelde by a certayne day.
TOtilas hauing set at a stay the Totilas besegeth Rome the thyrde, tyme. affaires of Calabrie and Appulia, determined to tourne backe againe and besege Rome. It made hym the bolder that Belisarius was gone, togither with the prosperous suc cesse of the Gothes in all their doyngs through Italye, and the euill fortune of the [...].
[Page] [...] [Page 154] [...] [Page]Wherevppon assemblyng a great [...] from all partes, when al things were in a readinesse, he came to Rome and besyeged it. There were in garryson in the Towne three thousand chosen Souldyers wyth theyr Captayne Diogenes a man of singular actiuitie, who by watchyng, workyng, and preuentynge in places conuenient defended the Citie stoutly. In so much that the syege was prolonged, and the Gothes had none other hope to winne it but by famyshement. Durynge Sute [...]ade to the emperour for [...]escowig the eyty [...] of Ro [...]. the syege aboute the Citye, Uigilius the Byshoppe of Rome beyng as then at Constantinople, and wyth hym many worthy men of Italy, made earnest sute to Iustinian that he woulde send Belis [...]rius agayne into Italy w t an inestimable power to raise the siege before Rome, otherwyse they declared that all was lyke to fall to vtter ruine. The same thing also requested Goding one that had bene Consull & was sent thyther [...]rom the people of [Page 155] Rome as an Ambassadour. Iustinian made them answere that he wold pro uide wel ynough for thaffairrs of Italy. Howbeit through his delaying & dri uing of frō day to day he did nothing in effect. At y • lēgth whē he saw thē ear nestlyin hand w t him frō time to time & y • hecould not be rid of thē, he denoūced Liberius one of the nobilitie of Rome Captayne generall of the warres in Italy, & at the begynnyng was verye whote in the furniture thereof. But within a while when other cares came in his head he beganne to waxe colde againe. And so with vayne hope some tyme makinge preparation and sometyme making d [...]layes the tyme passed awaye. Rome in the meane whyle was strayghtly besyeged. For the Gothes hauynge wonne the Cytye Portua keept them so shorte that nothyng coulde be conueyed in by the Tyber vnto them that were besyeged. And to the entent Rome shoulde not be releued from anye place, they had gotten [Page] into theyr ha [...]des well nye all th [...] townes aboute it. But the foresyght [...]he foresight and prouisiō of Diogenes for the sauig of Rome. and prouision of the Lieutenaunt and hys souldyers was wonderfull For they foreseynge these thynges a good whyle before, had caused all the voyde roomes within the Citie (where there stood no buyldinges (to be sowed with corne. By meanes wherof it came t [...] passe that by that tyme their old corne was spent, new came vp within the walles, where through th [...]y endured the syege a long tyme. Yea and by all likelyhood they had saued the Citie had Rome is betrayed. not the treason of a few peruerted thē. For at the gate that leadeth to Ostia; as ye goe to the Churche of Sayn [...]e Paule, there was a warde of Isaurien Souldyers. They after longe continuaunce of the syege, grudging amonge them [...]lues that they were defrauded of many yeres wages, in hope of greate rewardes at Totilas hand, stale preuely vnto hym bargainyng to betray hym the gate. Where the [...] [Page 156] warded, appoyntyng the tyme and the meane how to doe it. When the night prefixed was comme, Totilas deuised thys cautele. He set two Barges vppon the Ryuer Tyber wyth Trumpettours in them, commaunding them to rowe vppe the streame and to gette as nere the wall as they coulde, and when they came there to blowe theyr trumpettes as terrybly as they could. He hymselfe wyth hys ar [...]ye wente softlye wythoute noys [...], and stayed a lyttle way [...] from the gate before men [...]ioned. All thyngs happened according to hys desyre. For the trumpettours when they had rowed to the place appointed, with the terrible and sodayne noyse of their trumpettes, strake the Romayns in such a feare that they beleued their enemyes had bene there.
In so muche that they [...]ocked thyther from all partes of the Citie, and they that watched in other places left their standinges, and came runnynge thyther fearfully.
[Page]Nowe whyles eu [...]ry man resorted to that place, and tooke no héede to the Rome is taken. rest, the traytours beyng lefte alone brake open theyr gate and let Totilas wyth hys armye into the Cytye, whervppon immediatly ensewed slaughter as well of the Romaynes as of the souldyers. There was not than any car [...] taken howe to make resistens, but how to runne awaye. They fled by suche gates as were furthest fro the enemye. Diogenes the Captayne for as muche as he sawe there was none other remedye yssued oute of Rome wyth parte of hys souldyers and tooke hys waye toward Centmucelles. Totilas presupposinge as muche before (for all the rest of the townes were lost & there was no mo left them to fly vnto but onely that) laide an ambushe for him by the way, into y e which Diogenes f [...]lling lost a great parte of hys souldiers & himself beyng sore wounded The [...] doinges of captain Paule. had much a doe to escape wyth hys life. There was at Rome amōg other [Page 157] Captaines one Paule of Silicia, captaine of a trope of horsmen. He in this most troublesome nyght after he had skirmished with his enemis in diuers places of the Citie in the takyng therof, at length recouered hymselfe with his horsemen vnto Adrians. Tumbe. Assone as it was day light the Gothes swarming aboute the Citie (at what tyme that the Capitoll Esquilie & al y • rest of y e city was takē) there was hard feyghting still at Adrians tumbe. For Paule had. CCCC. horsemen wyth the whiche [...]e valiantlye defended the Tumbe and the brydge adioynynge thereto. In so muche that he slew manye of the Gothes in the skyrmishe vppon the brydge, & draue the rest a good way of. The whych Totilas beholding caused his men to retyre, I wylnot ( [...] he) bye the destructiō of these mē with the bloodshed of any of my people I will dispatch thē sitting still & neuer trouble my self for the matter, considering that neither they nor their horses [Page] haue wherw t to sustaine their liues vn till to morow. Thus hauing called his men frō the skirmishe, and set a strong watch against the tumbe & the bridge, he cōmaunded y • no man shuld molest or disquiet them y • were beseged. Paul & his band of horsmen hauyng [...] al that day & the nyght folowing w tout meate or drynke, the next day beganne to consult what was best to be doone. There were y • gaue counsel to endure the siege w t hors [...]eshe. But this deuise semed horrible for the lothsomnes of y • vnaccustomed feding. Hope to escap [...] by flyght there was none, the Gothes [...]tting thē on all sides round about ready at receipt to cut thē of. So there remained no [...]hift but to yeld, & that s [...] med both perillous and dishonorable, And therfore Paule taking vpon hym The wordes of Paule to his souldiers. to speake said in this wise. My fellows & companions in armes which way so euer we turne vs, ye see we are driuen to an vtter exigent. For there is no waye to escape by flyght, the enemies [Page 158] [...]roning vs round about with their armye, and taking so good hede to vs. And to yeld our selues to them, besides the disshonor & cowardnes of the facté, we are like to be horribly tormented & rent i pieces. For y • cruelty of these bar barous people is not wont to be cōten ted w t any simple kind of death. As to a bide the siege & to [...]de vpon horse flesh, let thē doe it that loke to be rescowed. I cannot see what reason ought to per suade vs vnto so great sufferance which are vtterly destitut of any such hope onlesse that like a sort of faintharted boies for feare of death we had rather pine ourselues w t sorow than haue our fleshe cut w t a sword. And I assure you eyther to yeld to thenemie or to starue for hunger, I count it the propertie of them that haue neither hart nor blood in thē. But vnto vs which are men of our handes, & acquainted w t feighting, an honorable death is rather to be em braced then a shamefull lyfe.
[Page]And therefore let vs in such wyse dye, that we may bath our selues in y e blood of our enemies & not die vnreuenged. Let not our enemye laugh at our destruction but wepe. Neyther let vs hold vp our throtes to be cut by them, but lette vs with our weapons cut theirs. For what can the respit of a few yeres profit vs? sythens that if we should escape aliue nowe, yet are we sure we shall die ere it be longe after. Glorye may lengthen mens liues, but nature cannot. Aduaunce your selues forth w t me therefore to an honorable death, the whyche oure enemyes aswell as our countrymen maye wonder at and extoll wyth eternall prayses to the sky. The horsemen encoraged wyth these wordes vowed thèm selues to deathe. And therevppon embracyng and kyssyng one another they prepared themselues to the battell full beent and determyned to spend theyr lyues manfully. Their purpose was to runne [Page 159] vppon the Gothes that warded next vnto them, and to bestow e theyr lyues in the slaughter of theyr enemyes. Fortune [...] reth the couragiou [...].
When Totilas sawe them thus bent to trye the vtter most, for feare least the desperate endeuour of them should doe the Gothes more displeasure, then otherwyse so small a number were able to doe, he sent an herault to them offeryng theym choyce whether they would departe wyth theyr lyues leauyng theyr Horse and armour behynd them, or elles retaynyng all styll serue hym in hys warres in lyke estate with other of hys Souldyers. When the horsemen heard that they were verye glad, and at the firste chose to leaue all that euer they had & to goe to Constan tinople. But afterward considering y • long iourney, and the daungers that might happen by the way [...], they returned their myndes & chose to abyde all w t Totilas, sauyng their Captayne Paule & Mundus an Isaurien. These two for as much as they had wife and [Page] childrē at home, desired to depart. And Totilas sheweth himself earnest in reparing and peopling of Rome. Totilas helping them liberally wyth v [...]and & other necessaries sent them again to Constantinople. Furthermore he commaunded y • no man should be so hardy as to offer any wrong to ani of thother souldiers in garrison that had taken sanctuarie in y • church. Toward the Citie of Rome he neither extended any crueltie, nor went aboute to make it desolate as he had done before. But made a serch for the Citizens therof in the townes of Campanie & in other pla ces, & reduced them home again. Furthermore he made in Rome tourneies and iustes & such other princelye pastimes as are wont to be done in fortunate & quiet Cities with great cost and solemnitie, to the entent the Citizens should conceiue good hope, & haue a desire to the Citie. The houses also which had bene ouerthrowen or consumed w t fire in the former desolation of the towne, he went about to reedifie and [Page 160] repayre. Finally he shewed nowe as great a desyre of replenishinge Rome as he had doone before of wasting and leauyng it desolate. Thys so great mu tabilitie and alteration of hys mynde, somme beleued to haue rysen vppon a vow that he had made to the Apostles Peter & Paule, whose tēples he myght seme to haue destroied whē he destroied y • citie. Othersome imputed it altogither to the profyte and commoditie of the warres. And dyuers doe reporte that when Totilas latelye before desyred the Frenche Kynges daughter in mariage, aunswere was made hym that he was not Kynge of Italye when he had subuerted the Cytye of Rome. The whych Taunt (men saye) altered hys mynde to the repayrynge of the Cytye. But what so euer was the cause of it, he endeuored to repayre and buylde agayne the Cytye of Rome. After thys he prepared to make a vyage into Sicill. [Page] For the furniture whereof he builded him a great flete of Galleyes, & made a greate number of hoyes and hulkes while he was making preparation for y • same, he determined to besiege both by water and by lande Centmucelles whiche one Citye was not yet comme vnder hys subiection. Captayne of that piece was Diogenes who (as is before mencioned) escaped lately from Rome. He had gathered to hym a good stronge companie of men of warre.
Therefore at suche tyme as the Gothyshe armie came thither and had encamped thēselues nere vnto the walls of the towne. Totilas sendyng an officer [...] sommoneth cent [...]ucelles. of Armes to hym, sommoned hym eyther to come & feyght it out w t his po wer against y e gothes, or els to yeld vp y • town vnto hī. For it was not for him to loke for any help at Justinians hand considering he neuer releued Rome al the while it was besieged, onles perchance he thought themperour did set more by Centmucells then by Rome. [Page 161] Diogenes replied therunto saying, that as for to fyghte with hym he was not mynded at that time, and as for to yeld vp the towne sauing his honour and fidelitie he coulde not, before he had sente to knowe the Emperours pleasure, and to desyre helpe. Whereuppon forasmuche as he seemed to speake that which was honest and reasonable they fel to composition, that onlesse the Emperour after warnyng geuen, dyd rescowe the towne by himself or by his reputie, Diogenes should surrender it at a certayne daye. And Totilas shoulde not in the meane season by any meanes moleste or dysquiet hym. For the assurance of these Articles Hostages were deliuered, and vppon thys agreement Totilas brake vp his siege.
The. [...]. Chapter.
[...] Totilas makyng warre in Sicill be [...]iegeth Siracuse, a new Lieuetennaunt is sent from [...]he Emperour into Italy.
[Page]WHen all thynges were nowe in a Totilas maketh warre in Sicill. readinesse that were to be prepared. Totilas turned hymselfe to the warres in Sicill, commaundyng that his shyppes shuld be ready at hand in the narrowe seas of Sicill. He hymself went by land vnto Rhegium, purposyng to haue wonne the towne by force. Captaynes of the towne were Teremund and Imere placed there by Belisarius not longe before. Who diuerse & sundry tymes repulsed the Gothes to their great losse, attemptyng to wynne y • towne by assault. By meanes wherof Totilas despayring to get it by violence, determined with long continuance of hys siege to subdue them by famyshment. And therefore leauyng a number of the Gothes about it, he conueyed all the reast of hys armye by water to wynne Tarent, the which [...] he easily obteyned. From thence wafting ouer into Sicil, after y • he had eyther by force of Armes or ells by composition gotten into his hand certayne of y • lesser [Page 162] townes, at length he besieged Siracuse The syege of Siracuse. both by sea & by land. By that tyme the Gothes which (as ye heard before) wer sent among the Picentes against Iohn & Ualerian, hauyng associated greate ayde vnto them and gotten the vpper hand in diuerse conflyctes, toke the Citye Arimine. And in another encounter not farre from [...], they sl [...] Uere Captayne of the Elurians wyth all hys ho [...]. Moreouer [...] & Imere whiche were be [...]ged in the towne of Rhegium, for want of victualls were fayne to y [...]e themselues & the towne to the Gothes. All these thynges being declared to the Emperour at one instant, namely the takyng of Rhegium, Tarent, and Arimine, and the passyng of Totilas into Sicill, made hym vtterly astonyed to heare of so many misfortunes at once. And ther vpō he denounced one Germā his cousin Germine by y • fathers side captaine of y • warres in Italy agaynst y • Gothes commaunding great preparation to be [Page] made for y • same. Whē y • fame hereof A new Lieuetennant s [...]nte into Italy frō themperour, was blowen into Italy, it greatly abas shed y • enemye & recōforted hys frends. For thys Gennā was a man of a hault courage, and of no le [...]e wysedome and pollicye, wonderfull lyberall, and verye welbeloued both wyth the people and wyth the souldyers. Besydes thys he had after the death of Uitigis taken to wyfe Mathasuta the nece of Kyng Theoderych, the whiche thyng wonne hym the hartes of the Gothes: and therefore as the fame of hym was great, so was he greatly loked & longed for in Italy.
The. vi. Chapter.
¶ Diogenes dalayeth with Totilas in deliue [...]yng vp of Centmucelles accordyng to cō position. The newe Lieuetennant of Italy, dyeth in hys waye whose sonnes are commaunded to prosecute theyr father [...] charge.
WHen German was nowe in Illiricke, The Sclaui [...] the nation of the Sclauines hauing passed y • riuer of Danow, [Page 163] [...]aded the prouinces of the Empyre of Rome. A kynde of people cruell and outragius beyonde all measure, whoe turnyng themselues toward Macedonie and Thrace, put Iustinian in suche a feare, that he commaunded German to stay his iourney into Italy. Through this taryans the Gothes had leysure [...] do what they lyste in Italy and Sicill. In the meane season came the daye appointed The answere of Diogenes to To [...] or Centmucell [...] that Diogenes should haue deli [...]ered Centmucellcs, wherupon Totilas s [...]ndyng vnto hym required hym to performe hys promyse. Diogenes alledged that Germane was newly created Captayne of the warres in Italye. By reason whereof he sayd the state of thynges was wholly altered, so that it laye not in his power to yelde y • towne, seing y • Lorde & proper owner of it was on hys iourney & would with in two or three daies be in Italy. Totilas was be sieging Siracuse in Sicill, and the Gothishe men of warre skowring through the whole countrie, made [...] of al [Page] thynges. In Italy Rauenna, Auchon, Hydrunt, and Centmucelles wyth certayne other townes remained styll imperiall. The Gothes helde all the reast. One only hope stayed them, namely the commyng of German, the whyche also fayled them. For wheras he was sore longed for in Italye, he was taken with a disease, and to the great sorrowe of all y • were belonging The death of [...]ermane. to hym dyed in Illiricke. German had two sonnes whom he led with hym into Italy. Them dyd the Emperour cō maunde to procede with their fathers enterprise, ioynly together with theyr kynseman Iohn Uitalian the Captain so well knowen in Italy. For Iohn. had maryed the daughter of German. Iohn therfore & the sonnes of Germā taking the charge of the army vpō them, came vnto Salons. And forasmuche as wynter was at hand they determyned to abyde that season there, & in the begynning of the nerte spring to passe ouer to Rauenna. About the same tyme well [Page 164] nye, Liberius being sente from themperour wyth a nauye entered into Siracuse, mawgre the Gothes that kepte their station in the hauen to pro [...]yte their arriuall. Howbeit for doubt of scarcety of victualls whyche so greate a number was soone lyke to cause in a Citye besieged, he purposed to goe his way agayne: and therfore wyth in a [...] dayes after hys commyng he tooke shippyng agayne and departyng from Syracuse arryued at Panorme.
The, vi. Chapter
¶ Narses is sente agayne Lieuetennant into Italye wyth a greate power and greate treasure, Totilas sendeth a nauye into Grece to infeste those countryes, and besyegeth Aucon in Italye. The Captaynes of Totilas are ouercome on the sea by the [...]mperialls and Aucon is rescowed The Gothes receaue another ouerthrow vpō the land, after the whichcertain Gothishe Captaynes become imperiall.
[Page]Narses marcheth with an inestimable pow er to Rauenna and from thence towarde Rome in the whiche iourney he [...] sheth a Captayne of the Gothes and killeth hym at Arimine. He encountereth with Totilas who in the same conflicte is slayne and Teias created kyng of Gothes in hys [...]eade.
IN the meane whyle the Emperour Marses is made themperours Lieue tennant in I [...]ly. alteryng hys purpose, made hys Eunuch Narses Lieuetennant general of the warres in Italy, makyng hym large promyses of men and mony. Also he wrote to Iohn that he shoulde not passe into Italy, but tary stil at Salons & there abyde the commyng of Narses. Narses therfore taking the charge couragiously vpon him, endeuored to leuie a great power from all places. To the performance whereof greatly auayled hys fauour & authoritye. For he was one of the Emperours preuis Counsel and ruled hym in manner as he lyste, & he had greate frendship and Aliance with the Kinges and the great Princes [Page 165] of the Barbarous nations. When hys Narses is stayed by the Hunnes. furniture was in a full readinesse, and that he had commaunded hys men of warre to mete hym all in Illiricke, as he was outward on hys iourney, & was come to Philippople in Thrace, he was of necessitye constrayned to staie and abyde a tyme in the same place. For the Hunnes enteryng with a great armye into Macedonie & Thrace, made spoyle of all thyngs, & had closed hys way that he could not passe. At the length when one parte of the Hunnes was gone to Thessalonicke & the other to Constantinople, Narses went from thence and kept on his iourney. By this time Totilas (hearyng of the great preparature of his enemies) was returned into Italy. Leauing for Lieuetennantes of the warres in Sicil foure of his captaines, & he hymself made prouisiō in Italy for all thynges that semed nedeful & requisite. And to the entent to vaunt hys Totil [...] sēdeth a na uye into Grece. power to the Grekes (as whoe shoulde say he was as well able to inuade them [Page] as they had bene to haue inuaded hi, he sent a great flete into Grece, cōmaundyng them to make as muche hauocke & spoyle of all thynges as they could accordyng to the same commaundement thys nauye, spoyled fyrst Corsyra & the Iles adioynyng therunto, & afterward aduenturyng vppon the mayne land, wasted and spoyled with fyre & sworde all the coast of Cypous, Acarnauia and Aetolia. And so keping still the seas, did cut of many Greke shippes by y • waye as they were sayling toward Italy and Illirium, in somuch y • no shippe coulde The besyegig of Aucon. styrre abrode for them. Whyle these thynges were a doyng in Grece, Totilas sendyng a freshe crewe of souldiers into the Countrye of the Picentes, cō maunded that Aucon shoulde be besieged both by sea & land. He made three Captaynes of thys enterprise: Scipuar Udilas & Gothidil, to whom he gaue a flete of seuen and fortye Galleyes. Whē Aucon was thus besyeged, there [Page 166] were so whote assaultes geuen both by sea and by land, that it stoode in greate perrill. Wherefore Ualerian who had the rule of Rauenna, forasmuche as [...] thought hymselfe to weake to rescowe them that were besyeged, he wrote to Iohn Uitaliā lying at Salons, requessting hym to ioyne wyth hym and so to rescowe them together. Iohn Albeit the Emperoure had geuen hym commaundemente that he shoulde not passe into Italye before the commyng of Narses, yet notwythstandyng forasmuche as he thought it agaynste hys honoure to lye styll and looke on while hys companions were in suche ieoperdye, he chose oute the beste men in all hys hoste and embarkyng them in eyghtene shyppes, set out of Salons and sayled towarde Rauenna. As he was in hys waye Ualerian met him wyth twelue galleyes well decked and furnished to fight. When y • Captaines had commoned betwene themselues, [Page] and by the aduise of such as were about them had determined as semed beste, they sayled with their whole nauye together agaynst their enemyes. And whē they came nere vnto Aucon, they drewe to the shore at a place which the inhabiters do call Duasse. The whiche Battell on the sea betwene the Gothes & the imperialls thyng assone as the Gothyshe Captaynes perceaued, they also addressyng themselues to the encounter furnished their nauie with the beste souldiers y • they coulde chose, & when they had put themselues in a readinesse, launched forth & set themselues in good order agaynst their enemyes. The Gothyshe shyppes wer in number seuen & fortie, & the Grekes were thirty [...], Captaynes whereof were Iohn and Ualerian, and Captaines of the Gothishe nauie were Udilas & Gothidill: for Scipuar abode with the reast of the armye to keepe the Camp. Therefore after that the Captaynes of eyther parte had encouraged their men, and with warlyke orations inflamed theyr myndes wyth hope of [Page 167] victorie, with eager stomackes they ioyned battell. At the very fyrst beginning the encounter was [...], meting with stemme to [...] & eche endeuoryng to ouermatche other, and the matter was handled with greate courage on both partes. For there was not any one in all that great companie whiche had not hys handes full. Insomuch that the matter was tryed wyth dartes, Iauelyngs, pykes, and swordes as if it had bene a battell vpon the land. Howbeit in continuance the Gothyshe nauie beganne to go by the worse. For albeit Conning & [...] perience preuayleth against force. they were good men of their handes & stowt [...] warryours, yet forasmuche as they wanted [...] in sea matters, they troubled themselues. For in some places they clustered so together, that one had not rome to [...] by another, and other some agayne to eschewe that fault, disseuered themselues so far frō the helpe of their companye, that their enemyes had them alwayes at aduantage. Wheras on the contrary part [...] [Page] Grekes wer greatly furthered through their connyng the good order of their Sea men there was no araye broken. A man could not haue sene among them any throngyng, nor scatteryng, but y • they were [...]uer nere at hand to helpe their companye & to be helped of them. And therefore as reason was, at length they gatte the vpper hand. Some of the The Gothes are vanquished and Aucon [...] Gothyshe shyppes were sunke w t their men of warre marriners & al. Many be ing wonne by fyne force were with incredible slaughter taken. The whiche whē the Gothes beheld, by and by they toke them to flight. There were no mo but ten of their shippes that escaped to land vnperished. The reast were either taken or ells drowned, there was made a great slaughter of the men in the battell and in the chace. They that escaped to land, dyd forthwith set their shippes on fyre, to the entent their enemyes shoulde not obtayne them, & returned into their Camp. Where they were stricken with such a feare, that they determined [Page 168] to breake vp their [...]. Whereupon in all haste they forsooke their Campe and fled vnto Auximum. John and Ualerian enteryng into the hauen of Aucō with their victorious nauye to the great comfort and incredible reioycement of the [...], made hast to ryfflyng of the enemyes Camp. The which they findyng forsaken, caused all the virtualls & artillery that they founde there to be conueyed into the citye. They thēselues within fewe daies [...] tur neth a [...]aynst he Gothes. after departed, Ualerian vnto Rauenna and John vnto Salons. Thys battell dyd sore discourage the hartes of y • Gothes, & was as it were a preparatiue of a greater ruine y • was toward them. For Totilas being not a little disquietted w t this losse pulled backe a greate part of his army out of Si [...]ill. By meanes whereof Artauanes the E [...]perours Captayne subrogated in y • rome of Liberius hauyng receaued hys nauye of hym, beganne to growe y • stronger in Sicill.
[Page]Insomuche that he not onely deliuered his confederates from y • besiegemente, but also besieged the Gothes in diuerse places in their own townes. Moreouer The Gothes receaue another [...]. ere it was long after, an other nauie of Grekes commyng vnloked for to the rescowe of the Crotoniens longe tyme besieged by the Gothes, raysed y • siege & discomfited their enemyes with great bloudshed & slaughter. The Gothes be ing dispersed fled some to Tarent, and some withdrewe themselues into the next mountayne called Scyllaum, the which ouerthrowe together with y e former slaughter, dyd muche more discourage the hartes of the Gothes, In especially forasmuch as there went a great brute through out all Italy of Narses cōmyng & of his preparatiō for y • wars, what great furniture he brought with him, & that ther began already to spring vp certain rebellions against Totilas. For one Reguaris a noble mā among Reuoltyng to the part of the impe [...]. the Gothes Captaine of Tarent, and Morras captayne of Acheruse, reuolted [Page 169] to the Emperour with theyr townes and souldiers wherof they had charge. The power of Na [...]s. Furthermore tydinges was brought of another insurrection agaynste the Gothes in Sardinia. Whyle thynges were in thys estate in Italy, Narses assemblynge hys power in the wynter season, addressed hymselfe to hys Iourney: he had suche an armye of men, as scarce all the Captaynes beynge putte all togyther, broughte wyth them into Italye durynge the whole tyme of thys warre. For the Emperour gaue hym so large allowaunce of monnye, and he hymselfe was so bountefull and lyberall in bestowing & distributing of the same, y • he leuied a greate power not onely in Thrace & Grece, but also out of diuers Albuine kin [...] of Lombardes. other places. For he had entertained a boue fiue M. Lombardes notable mē of war by y • consent of Albuine theyr Cumades [...] Persian, Kinge, and, MMM. of the Erulians. Furthermore there came vnto hym a great number of the H [...]nnes.
[Page]Also there was one Cumades a Persian that had bene trayned vppe in the Romaine warres, who with a valiant band of Persians resorted vnto hym. Moreouer there came to hym a warlyke yong gentleman called Assuades wyth fyue hundred feyghtynge men of the Sepides: and Iohn surn [...]ed Phagas wyth an hoste of the Gréekes and Thracians. Besydes this, Iohn Uitalian, and the sonnes of Germaine serued hym wyth theyr armyes. Narses therefore hauyng thys so great an hoste, as soone as the sprynge tyme approched, passed oute of Illiricum throughe Dalmatia and Liburnia and so coastynge aboute the elbowe of the Sea came by lande into Italye, not stayinge anye where vntyll he was amonge the Uenetians. There were twoo wayes by the whyche he myghte handsomelye passe from the Uenetians. The one by the Adriaticke Sea, the other throughe the mayne Lande, bothe whyche séemed [Page 170] to haue manye lettes. For by the Seas syde the Ryuer Athesis maketh greate Lakes whyche fall into the Sea in manye Chanelles, and the riuer Po beynge deuyded into manye streames, dothe in dyuers places interrupte the Iourney, wyth manye quamyers and mooryshe groundes, so that an Armye can not well be led that waye wythoute greate trouble. Agayne in the waye by the mayne T [...]ias afterward king of the gothes. Lande one of the Gothes called Te [...]as placed at Uer [...]n wyth an Armye by Totilas, had intercepted hys passage ouer the Ryuers of Athesis and Po. These twoo streames runnynge downe from the Alpes whych deuyde Italy from Fraunce and Germanye, dooe fall into the Adriatycke sea. And therefore they that wyll passe from Uenice, muste needes passe ouer them eyther by the Seas syde where as be Lakes and meres fallynge by dyuers Chanelles into the Sea, and where the mowthes of Po doe ouerthwart [Page] them betwene Rauenna & Clodius diches: or ells they must passe the same riuers in the mayne land, where they be great & vndeuided, and where they may easly be stopped of their passage, if there be any body to withstand them. Wherfore seing y e Teias was at Ueron the which is a citie standing vpon the Riuer Athesis, & had a power sufficient to let him of his passage Narses left the way through the maine land, & chose to go by the coast of the Adriaticke sea, both bicause it was w eout im peachment of enemyes, & besides that, was nearer way then thother. And so Na [...]ses comming to Rauenna. marchig by Clodius diches & the felds of Adria, and passing ouer the Riuers whersoeuer they crossed his way, some where with brydges & somewhere w e botes, at length he came with al his ar mie vnto Rauenna. There Captaine Ualerian and Captaine Iustine wyth their bandes, ioyned themselues with Narses. There were in Italye a great number of old souldiers, who by reasō [Page 171] the Emperour was behind hand with their wages for a longe tym [...] togyther were offended in theyr hartes, and woulde not go forthe to the warres.
Narses payed theym all theyr wages, whereby he healed theyr griefes and gaue theym courage agayne▪
Hauynge spent nyne daies in dooinge these thynges and in refreshing hys armye at Rauenna, he remoued from thens & march [...]d toward Rome. The A conflict at Arimine. same time was one [...] captayne of Arimine as notable a warriour as was among al y e gothes. Who ( [...] as the [...]oward of Narses ho [...]te was come into the felds of [...]) went about to stoppe them of their passage. The Ryuer that runneth by Arimine was ryse [...] wyth rayne, vppon the whyche was a brydge so harde vnder neath the Towne that it was an easye matter to stoppe the passage.
[...] therefore yssuynge out of Arimine before that anye number of [Page] hys enemyes had passed the [...], sette hymselfe at defence on the furthersyde, and encountered wyth hys enemyes euen harde vnder the walls of the towne. In the whych conflycte a certayne man of Arines of the Erulians feyghtyng wyth [...] hande to hand slewe hym, and hys souldiers discouraged wyth the deathe of theyr Captayne, retyred fearefully into the Town [...]. The head of Usorilas was broughte vnto Narses, at the whyche Narses [...] and takynge it for a tooken of good lucke, that the chyefe of hys enemyes was [...] by hys men at the fyrsts confly [...]te, kepte on hys waye full of good hope and comfort. For albeit he had a good furtheraunce to the takynge of Arimin [...] at the same instant, yet notw tstanding he wold not tary about it to the entent so great an army shuld not be let [...]ed about the sege of one towne, & therefore [...]e passed by Arimine & continued on his iourny. Totilas hauing intelligns [Page 172] of those things y • were done amonge y • Uenitians, & vnderstanding of the passage of Narses and of his comming to Rauēna, although almost al his whole power were at that time w t Teias, yet The death of Totilas. notwithstanding he determined to en counter w t Narses, the which he did, & in the battell was slayn for his labour▪ As many of the Gothes as escaped frō the field, fled ouer the riuer Po & assē bled togither at Pauie & there abouts. In the whiche place as they consulted of making a newe gouernour of theyr Teias is created kinge of the gothes. people, Teias was preferred by the iudgement of all men & chosen king of the Gothes. After that he was thus in stalled in the siege roial, by & by he toke to his vse the threasures that Totilas had laid vp at Pauie, diligently going in hand to repaire his power, to raise a new army, to geue & distribute horse & armour, & to do [...] all other things vigilantlye, and moreouer to send to the Frenchmen to allur [...] them to take his part in the warres.
❧ The. viii. Chapter.
¶ Narses continuinge his iourney receiueth Narma and Peruse, and winneth Rome by assaulte, wherevppon the gothes extend a maruelous crueltye against the Romaine prysonners.
NARSES hearynge therof, commaunded Ualerian to lye as it were in garrison wyth hys band about the Ryuer Po, to the entent the Gothes shoulde not straye to farre abroade at theyr pleasure wythoute feare and he hymselfe wyth the rest of hys armye marched to Rome. In hys waye Narma was yelded vppe to him and he graunted the men of Spolet certayne of hys souldiers for theyr defence vntyll they myght repayre theyr walles whyche Totilas had beaten downe. Also he sent to Peruse to sommon that Towne, there were in Peruse two Captaynes Melegidius and Ulithus. Who beynge at variance betwene theymselues drewe soundrye [Page 173] wayes. For Melegidius coueted to yelde vppe the Citye. But Ulithus Melegidius and Vlithus Captaines of the Gothes. beynge gyltye of the treason and the murther latelye commytted agaynste Cyprian, stroue agaynste it, for feare to be punnished accordynge to hys desertes. By meanes where of there rose contention, in the whyche Ulithus was slayne, and Peruse was yelded vppe to Narses by Melegidius. After thys Narses proceedynge to Rome besyeged it. The Cytye of Rome at that tyme stoode in thys estate. The Cityzens beynge afflycted wyth the former calamytyes resorted not in any greate number into the Cytye. Ye should haue seene whole stréetes emtye and neither man nor woman dwel lynge in theym, and the houses eyther fallen downe or elles bourned.
For Totilas not able to repayre it agayne speciallye the Cytyzens beynge so sore wasted and in manner destroyed.
[Page]The Gothes therfore distrusting their own weaknes that they were not sufficient to defend the whole Citie, had chosē a piece of ground not very bigge nere vnto Adrians tumbe, the whych they strongly fortified with a diche & a rampyre & ioyned it to the wall of the rest of the Citie. Into the whych place they conueied all their munitions and artillerie vsing it as a fort or a holde. Neuertheles they did not vtterly aban don vp the citie, but defended it as well as they could. Narses therefore determining to winne the citie, assaulted it in diuers places at ones. And the Gothes resorting to the same places stood at defence from y e walls. While these Narses taketh Rome,. thinges were a doing, another cōpanie of the souldyers of Narses stealing aboute to the further syde & fyndynge no bodye there, rered vp their ladders and skailed the walles. The noyse that was made there vppon bewraied that the Cytye was taken, and the Go thes leauing theyr defence, some fled [Page 174] to the towne of Portua & some wythdrew thēselues to the forte at Adrians tumbe. By thys meanes Narses gate The crueltie of the gothes tovvarde the Romaynes. Rome, & after he had a whyle besyeged the hold, he toke it by composition. There were in Campanie many Senatours & Senatours children, whom Totilas for the great aucthoritie & fauour that their auncestours had, wold not suffer to retourne into the Cytye. Besydes them, there were dyuers of the nobilitie whyche the Gothes had sent thither vpon mistrust. All the whi che, wyth their, children and kynsfocke the gothes did put to death. Moreouer Totilas had chosen CCC. yongmē as it had bene to serue him in y • wars, but in very déede to keepe thē for pledges, and therefore he sent them on a vyage beyond the Riuer Po. The which like wyse after that Rome was come into y • hands of Narses, were put [...]o death euery chone by the Gothes.
❧ The ix. Chapter,
¶The falsehoode and treason of a gothishe Captay ne named Regharis. Narses recouereth Portua. Teias kinge of the gothe [...] and the sayd Narses encamp [...]one againste another by a Ryuers syde the watter runnynge betwyxte them wythoute anye battell vntyll after longe tyme Teias hauynge throughe treason loste [...] shippes and by meanes thereof beynge [...] of victualle and artillerye to keepe that grounde anye lenger remoueth to a hyll not farre from the same place, where beynge in manner besyeged by Narses, he setteth hys men in [...]tell raye and geuynge ferce assaulte vp [...]on [...] enemyes after a whole dayes [...] and manye a noble deede of prowesse by hym doone he is at laste slaine and the battell ceaseth for that [...]yghte the whyche begynneth agayne the nexte mornyng, conty newinge all the daye [...] [...]yll it be darcke nyghte. Wherevppon they sende commissioners vnto Narses for peace why che vppon reasonable condytions is graunted and the warres in [...] are broughte to a fynall ende and quietnesse.
[Page 175]ABOUTE the same tyme The falsehod and treason of Reg [...]. Regnaris Captayne of Tarent when he hearde that Te [...]as was made Kynge and that the Frenchemen woulde comme to hys ayde, repented hym that he hadde reuoulted to the Emperour, and determyned to tourne to the Gothes agayne. Nowe to the entente he woulde recouer agayne hys hostages, he ymagined thys subteltye. He sent to Macurius Captayne of Hydrunt, desyrynge hym of ayde agaynste an armye of the Gothes whyche he falselye alledged were commynge agaynste hym.
Ma [...]urius mystrustynge no deceipte sente hym fyftye of hys Souldyers to Tarent, whome Regnaris immediatlye caste into pryson, and wrat vnto Macurius that yf he woulde [Page] haue his souldiers, he should delyuer hym the hostages that he had of hys in kéeping. Uppon the receit of thys message, Macurius was sore troubled in hys mynde, and leauyng a few men behynde hym for the defence of hys piece, went wyth the rest of hys armye agaynste Regnaris. Regnaris makynge no delaye in the matter, put to deathe all the Souldyers that he had receyued, and then yssuynge oute of Tarent to encounter wyth Macurius was putte to the worse, and being driuen to flye with the losse of most of his souldyers when he coulde not recouer to Tarent for that the waies wers sorelayed, he gate hym to Acheruse. In the meane season Narses sendyng Narses recouereth Portua. hys armye to Portua, besieged the towne & at length recouered it. After thys he assailed Centmucelles and in likewise brought it in subiectiō. Teias also ceased not to sollicit the Frenche nation and to allure them to take hys parte in the warres, promysinge them [Page 176] sometyme monnye and sometyme copertenershyppe of the kyngdome of Italye. But the Frenchemen had alreadye determyned not to entermedle themselues in anye suche warres. By meanes whereof the Gothes were disappoynted of theyr hope. Totilas in the time of hys lyfe had gathered togyther a greate Threasure at Pauye, & had layd vp no small masse of monny in the fortresse of Cume, & had made his brother Captaine of the same fortresse. When Narses had vnderstanding therof, he sent part of hys armye to besyege Cume, and he hymselfe abydynge still at Rome, endeuored to repayre the Cytye and to replenyshe it wyth people. And to the entente that the Gothes that were beyonde the Ryuer Po shoulde not rescowe Cume or anye other of the places that were besyeged, he commaunded Iohn Uitalian and Philimunt wyth theyr bandes to abyde in Hetruria, to [Page] sette themselues agaynste the enemye at the fyrste approche and cutte them of ere they came anye further. For Teias when he perceyued that Cume was besyeged, determyned fullye to goe and rescowe it. Whervppon settynge oute of Pauye, by longe and ouerthwarte iourneyes he ledde hys hoste by the shore of the vpper sea and so throughe the countryes of the Picentes and Marses into Campanye. The whiche when Narses vnderstood he called Iohn wyth hys band oute of Hetruria. After whose commynge he marched forwarde into Campanye wyth hys whole power fullye purposing to encounter wyth Teias. There The mountaine Vesuuius. is a hill in Campanye called Uesuuius oute of the tooppe whereof oftentymes ryseth vppe smoke and flames of fyre. But in the foote of the same mountain are springs of swete water the whiche doe make a brooke called Dracon that runneth not farre from the Citye Nuceria. [Page 177] thys brooke is not very brode, but it is so deepe that neyther horseman nor foteman can passe it. Aboute thys ryuer bothe armyes encamped Narses Narses & Teias encamp [...] gether par [...] with a [...]. on the hyther syde and Teias on the furtherside, the riuer ronning in the myddes betwene thē both. There was but one brydge ouer it, & that had the Gothes taken. By meanes wherof it laye in their hande to chose whyther they would fyght or not fyght. The armyes abode in thys sorte by the space of two monethes, so that Narses & his mē which were desyrous to come to hande strokes, could not by any meanes come to their enemyes, only they came to the riuers syde from both Campes & shotte arrowes and threw dartes one at another. Also there were fought many cō bates and many chalenges were performed on both sydes duryng the sayd tyme, & the Gothyshe souldiers passing ouer the brydge dyd [...]ight with the souldiers of Narses hand to hand. The sea was well & nere at hand & the Gothes [Page] had their shippes vpō the water which alwayes brought corne and victualls & set it a land nere vnto them, frō whence The Gothes lose their ship pes by [...]. it was [...]il conueyed to the Camp. But after the time that their nauie through treason was loste, and that they coulde haue no more [...]ualls and artillery [...] brought to thē by the sea, the Gothes were constrayned of necessitye to dyslodge frō that place. Whereupon forsaking the bridge & the grounde by the riuers syde, they departed to the nexte [...]yll which the inhabitantes of the coū trye do cal the mylkie hyll. Narses pursuyng them (forasmuch as he could not assayle them by reason of the stepenesse of the hyll,) settled hymselfe about the foote of it. The Gothes beyng in the same place also as much oppressed with [...] as they were before, determined to put the matter in tryall by the sworde. And thereupon puttyng themselues A cruel battel betwene the Gothes & the imperialls. in aray vpon the toppe of the hil, they descended from aboue & sodaynely assayled their enemyes thynkyng nothing [Page 178] lesse, then of any such matter, in somuch that they had not any leysure to order their battells or to encourage their souldiers, but were fayne to sette thēselues against the enemie according as euery mannes fortune had appoynted hym. And for bicause the Gothes had left their horfes & fought on foote, Narses dyd set hys fotemen also to encounter with them. The battell was cruell & bloudy in all places. For [...]n the one syde the Gothes fought obstinately as men in despayre, & on the other syde the souldiers of Narses were [...] to geue place being so many in number as they were, in especially consyderyng that but euen the other daye they had compelled them to forsake their firste campe, and had we [...] nie beūeged them now in the hyll which they had fled to for their refuge. Both parties being incensed with these persuasions, foughte The [...]table p [...]owesse & courage of Te ias king of the Gothes▪ very valiantly▪ I will not passe ouer with [...] the noble Demeanor of Teias Kyng of the Gothes in hys hattel [Page] For he being endued as it were with an heroical prowesse, wolde nedes put himselfe into the forefront of the battel among the formest fyghters. He was easye to be knowen from the reast by hys goodly armour & hys ryche apparrell. In the lyft hand he helde a target & in hys ryght hand he brandished a Iauelyng. Many that encountered agaynst hym he strake starke dead, & yet dartes came flying at him frō all sides Howbeit he being of an incredible courage and strength dyd maruayles in armes. At the length when hys shylde stake full of dartes so that he could not handsomely wield it, standyng with his face towarde hys enemyes & calling to his harnessebearer by name he cōmaū ded hym with a loude voyce to bryng hym another target. When it was brought vnto hym, he let slyppe hys old one, to haue taken the new in his hand, in the which chaunge it was his chaī [...] to receaue his deathe swoūde by a [...]art that was sent at hym. By the whyche [Page 179] [...] he lost much bloud, yet notwithstandyng lyke a most puyssant champion he neuer gaue foote backe nor neuer tourned hys face, but standyng stoutly towarde hys enemyes, fought it oute as longe as he was able to stande on hys legges, vntyll at length [...]ebled wyth trauell and losse of blouds he fell downe flatte vppon hys face. It was almost [...]yre of the clocke when Teias dyed. And yet the Gothes The death of Teias. were nothyng at all dyscouraged wyth the death of theyr Kyng, but helde oute the battell vntyll it was nyghte neuer geuyng one foote backe. Fiynallye when it was so darke that they coulde not see, the battell ceased, beyng begonne at the sonne rysyng. That nyghte both the armyes watched in theyr harnesse, and assoons as the daye pered [...], they fell to fyghtyng a freshe, contynuing so styll vnto the sonne goyng downe to the great [...]aughter of both partes. At length the Gothes sente vnto Narses offeryng [Page] to departe oute of Italye so he would suffer them wythout impeache [...]e to carrye suche thynges as they had awaye wyth them. But yf he woulde not graunt them thys request, they sayd they would neuer leaue fightyng, as long as the breathe was in their bodyes. When Narses had heard their demau [...]des, by the aduise of hys counsell he condys [...]nded vnto thē, to the entent he would not to the great preiudy [...]e and losse of hy [...] men, seeke the aduantage of hys desperate enemye. In the meane tyme aboute a thousande horsemen [...]ed oute of the Camp of the Gothes, and by greate iourneyes came vnto Pau [...]e and other townes beyonde the ry [...] Po [...]. The residue fell to a fynall agreement with Narses, promisyng to departe [...] Italye, carrying nothyng more then euery man hys owne, and neuer after to make warre vpon the Romayn [...] Empyre, prouyded alwayes that they themselues shoulde retayne [...]till their [Page 180] freedome and libertye wythout any bondage or subiection to the Empyre. The whiche being done according to couenant, Narses receaued Cume & al other townes that held with the Gothes, and so ended the eyghtenthe yeare of this warre.