CONSTANTINE THE GREAT, CHAPTERS I & II
PROLEGOMENA.
I.--CONSTANTINE THE GREAT.
CHAPTER I. LIFE (1)
The Emperor Flavius Valerius Constantinus, surnamed the Great, (2) born
February 27, 272 or 274, (3 at Naissus, (4) was son of Constantius Chlorus,
afterwards Emperor, (5) and Helena his wife. (6) He was brought up at Drepanum, his
mother's home, (7) where he remained until his father became Caesar (A.D. 292
acc. to Clinton) and divorced Helena (Anon. Vales. p. 471). He was then sent to
the court of Diocletian, nominally to be educated (Praxagoras, in Mailer,
Fragm. 4 (1868); Zonar. 13. 1, &c.), but really as hostage, (1) and remained with
Diocletian, or Galerius, until the year 306. (2) During this time he took part in
various campaigns, including the famous Egyptian expedition of Diocletian in
296 (Euseb. V. C. 1. 19; Anon. Metroph., Theoph. p. 10). (3) Shortly after
joining the emperor he contracted (296 or 297) his alliance with Minervina, (4) by
whom he had a son, Crispus. (5) He was at Nicomedia when Diocletian's palace was
struck by lightning (Const. Orat. 35), and was present at the abdication of
Diocletian and Maximinus in 305 (Lact. De M.P.c. 18 sq.). This last event proved
a crisis for Constantine. He had grown to be a man of fine physique (Lact. c.
18; Euseb. V. C. 1. 19), of proved courage and military skill (cf. remarks on
physical characteristics under Character), and a general favorite (Lact. 1.c.).
He had already "long before" (Lact. c. 18) been created Tribune of the first
order. It was both natural and fitting that at this time he should become Caesar
in the place of his father, who became. Augustus. Every one supposed he would be
chosen (c. 19), and Diocletian urged it (c. 18), but the princely youth was
too able and illustrious to please Galerius, and Constantine was set aside for
obscure, and incompetent men (cf. Lact.). His position was far from easy before.
His brilliant parts naturally aroused the jealousy and suspicions of the
emperors. They, or at least Galerius, even sought his death, it is said, by tempting
him to fight wild beasts (a lion, Praxag. p. 3; cf. Zonaras 2, p. 623), or
exposing him to special danger in battle (cf. Philistog. 1. 6; Lact. c. 24; Anon.
Vales. p. 471; Theophanes p. 10--12, &c.). The situation, hard enough before,
now became, we may well believe, intolerable. He was humiliated, handicapped, and
even in danger of his life. He was practically a prisoner. The problem was,
how to get away. Several times Constantius asked that his son might be allowed to
join him, but in vain (Lact. c. 24; Anon. Vales. p. 471). Finally, however,
Constantine gained a grudging permission to go. It was given at night, and the
emperor intended to take it back in the morning (Lact. c. 24). But in the morning
it was too late. Constantine had left at once to join his father. He lost no
time either in starting or making the journey. Each relay of post horses which
he left was maimed to baffle pursuit (Anon. Vales., Vict. Epit. p. 49; cf. Lact.
c. 24, Praxag. p. 3). The rage of the emperor when he learned of the flight
was great but vain. Constantine was already out of reach, and soon joined his
father at Bononia (Boulogne, Anon. Vales.; cf. Eumen. Paneg. (310), c. 7), (6)
just in time to accompany him on his final expeditions to Britain (Eumen. Paneg.
(310) c. 7; cf. Anon. Vales. 1.c.). Constantius died shortly after at York
(Anon. Vales. p. 471; Eutrop. 10. 1), having named Constantine as his successor
(Euseb. V. C. 1. 21; Eumen. Paneg. (310) c. 7.; Lact. c. 24).
- 2. The First Five Years of Reign.
The will of the father was promptly ratified by the soldiers, who at once
proclaimed Constantine Augustus. (1) Supported by them, and also by Erocus,
king of the Allemanni (Vict. p. 49-50), he sent his portrait to Galerius, claiming
the title of Augustus. This the emperor refused to grant, but, much against
his will, allowed him to have the title of Caesar (Lact. c.). Constantine did not
insist on his fight to the greater title, but waited his time, and in the
interim contented himself with the lesser,-- as the coins show. (2) There was
enough to do. After his father's death he waged war against the Francs, and later
against the Bructeri and others (Eutrop. 10. 3; Paneg. (307) c. 4; Eumen. Paneg.
(310) cc. 10-12; Nazar. Paneg. (321) 18; Euseb. V. C. 1. 25, &c.; cf. Inscr.
ap. Clinton 2. 93), and celebrated his victories by exposing his captives to the
wild beasts (Eutrop. 10. 3; Eumen. Paneg. (310) c. 12; Paneg. (313) c. 23; cf.
Nazar. Paneg. (321) c. 16).
Meanwhile affairs were marching at Rome, too. The same year (306) that
Constantine was elected Augustus by the soldiers, Maxentius at Rome was proclaimed
emperor by the Pretorian Guards (Eutrop. 10. 2; Vict. Caes. p. 156; Anon.
Vales. p. 472; Zos. 2. 9 ; Socr. 1. 2; Oros. c. 26, &c. ; Lact. c. 26). He
persuaded the willing (Eutrop. 10. 2) Maximian to resume the imperial purple (Lact. c.
26; Zos. 2. 10), but soon quarreled with him (Socr. 1. 2; Eutrop. 10. 3; Zos.
11; Lact. c. 28). (3) In 307 Constantine and Maximinus were named "sons of the
emperors," and the following year were reluctantly acknowledged as emperors by
Galerius. Maximian, after he had quarreled with his son, betook himself to Gaul
and made alliance with Constantine by giving his daughter Fausta in marriage
(307). He proved an uncomfortable relative. The much-abused mother-in-law of
fiction is not to be compared with this choice father-in-law of history. First he
tried to supersede Constantine by corrupting his soldiers. At his persuasion
Constantine had left behind the bulk of his army while he made a campaign on the
frontier. As soon as he was supposably out of the way, the soldiers were won by
largesses, and Maximian assumed the purple again. But he had reckoned without
his host. Constantine acted with decisive promptness, returned by such rapid
marches that he caught Maximian entirely unprepared (Lact. c. 29) and drove him
into Marseilles, where the latter cursed him vigorously from the walls (Lact. c.
29), but was able to offer no more tangible resistance. The gates were thrown
open (Lact. c. 29), and Maximian was in the power of Constantine, who this time
spared his precious father-in-law. (4) Grateful for this mildness, Maximian
then plotted to murder him. The plan was for Fausta to leave her husband's door
open and for Maximian to enter and kill Constantine with his own hands. Fausta
pretended to agree, but told her husband (Zos. 2. 11 ; Joh. Ant. p. 603; Oros. c.
28), who put a slave in his own place (but apparently did not "put himself in
the place of" the slave), had the program been carried out, and catching
Maximian in the act, granted him that supreme ancient mercy, -- the right to choose
how he would die (Lact. c. 30). (5)
Though in the midst of wars and plots, and liable at any time to have to
run from one end of his province to the other to put down some insurrection,
Constantine kept steadily at the work of internal improvement, organizing the
interior, fortifying the boundaries, building bridges, restoring cities, building
up educational institutions, &c. (1) At the end of five years' reign (July 24,
311) he had reduced the turbulent tribes, organized his affairs, and endeared
himself to his people, especially to the Christians, whom he had favored from the
first (Lact. c. 24), and who could hardly fail in those days of persecution to
rejoice in a policy such as is indicated in his letter to Maximinus Daza in
behalf of persecuted Christians (Lact, c. 37).
- 3. State of Affairs in 311.
In the meantime, while the extreme west of the empire was enjoying the
mild rule of Constantine, the other corners of the now quadrangular and now
hexagonal world, over which during this time Maximinus, Galerius, Licinius, Maximian,
and Maxentius had tried to reign, had had a much less comfortable time. Every
emperor wanted a corner to himself, and, having his corner, wanted that of some
one else or feared that some one else wanted his. In order clearly to
understand Constantine, a glimpse of the state of affairs in these other parts of the
empire, together with some idea of the kind of men with whom he had to deal is
essential, and may be gotten from a brief view of (1) The rulers, (2) Characters
of the rulers, (3) Condition of the ruled.
(1) The Rulers.
The intricate process of evolution and devolution of emperors, mysterious
to the uninitiated as a Chinese puzzle, is briefly as follows: In 305
Diocletian and Maximian had abdicated (Lact. c. 18; Eutrop. 9. 27; Vict. Caes.),
Galerius and Constantius succeeding as Augusti and Severus, Maximinus Daza succeeding
them as Caesars (Lact. c. 19). In 306 Constantius died, Constantine was
proclaimed Augustus by his army, Maxentius by the Pretorian Guards (cf. above), and
Severus by Galerius (Lact. c. 25), while Maximian resumed the purple (see
above)--four emperors, Galerius, Severus, Maximian, and Maxentius, with two Caesars,
Constantine and Maximinus, one with a pretty definite claim to the purple, and
the other bound not to be left out in the cold. In 307 Licinius was appointed
Augustus by Galerius (Lact. c. 29; Vict. Caes.; Zos. 2. 11; Anon. Vales.; Eutrop.
10. 4), who also threw a sop to Cerberus by naming Constantine and Maximin
"sons of emperors" (Lact. c. 32; Coins in Eckhel 8 (1838) 52. 3). Constantine was
given title of Augustus by Maximianus (?), and Maximinus about this time was
forced, as he said, by his army to assume the title. Meantime the growing
procession of emperors was reduced by one. Severus, sent against Maxentius, was
deserted by his soldiers, captured, and slain in 307 (Lact. c. 26; Zos. 2. 10; Anon.
Vales.; Eutrop. 10. 2; Vict. Caes. &c. &c.), leaving still six emperors or
claimants,-- Galerius, Licinius, Maxentius, Maximian, Maximinus, and Constantine.
In 308, making the best of a bad matter, Galerius appointed Constantine and
Maximin Augusti (see above), leaving the situation unchanged, and so it remained
until the death of Maximian in 310 (see above), and of Galerius in May, 311
(Lact. c. 33; Vict. Caes., Vict. Epit.; Zos. 2. 11) reduced the number to four.
(2) Characters of the Rulers.
Constantine's own character has been hinted at and will be studied later.
Severus was the least significant of the others, having a brief reign and being
little mentioned by historians. Diocletian's characterization of him was,
according to Lactantius (c. 18), as ejaculated to Galerius, "That dancing,
carousing drunkard who turns night into day and day into night." The average character
of the other emperors was that of the prisoners for life in our modern state
prisons. Galerius, "that pernicious wild beast" (Lact. c. 25), was uneducated,
drunken (Anon. Vales. p. 472); fond of boasting himself to be the illegitimate
son of a dragon (Lact. 9; Vict. Epit. p. 49), and sanguinary and ferocious to an
extraordinary degree (Lact. c. 9. 21, 22, &c.). Licinius, characterized by
"ingratitude" and "cold-blooded ferocity," was "not only totally indifferent to
human life and suffering, and regardless of any principle of law or justice which
might interfere with the gratification of his passions, but he was
systematically treacherous and cruel, possessed of not one redeeming quality save physical
courage and military skill" (Ramsay, in Smith Dict. 2, p. 784; compare Euseb.
H. E. 10. 8; V. C. 1. 49-56), and "in avaricious cupidity worst of all" (Vict.
Epit. p. 51). Maximinus' character "stands forth as pre-eminent for brutal
licentiousness and ferocious cruelty--'lust hard by hate' " (Plumptre, in Smith & W.
3, p. 872), and according to Lactantius, c. 38, "that which distinguished his
character and in which he transcended all former emperors was his desire of
debauching women," He was cruel, superstitious, gluttonous, rapacious, and "so
addicted to intoxication that in his drunken frolics he was frequently deranged
and deprived of his reason like a madman" (Euseb. H. E. 8. 14). Maximianus has
been thought to be on the whole the least outrageous, and his somewhat defective
moral sense respecting treachery and murder has been noted (cf. above). He has
been described as "thoroughly unprincipled . . . base and cruel" (Ramsay, in
Smith Dict. 2, p. 981). He is described by Victor, (Epit. p. 48) as "ferus
natura, ardens libidine," being addicted to extraordinary and unnatural lust (Lact.
c. 8). Truly a choice "best" in this rogues' gallery. Of Maxentius it is said
(Tyrwhitt, in Smith & W. 3, p. 865): "His wickedness seems to have transcended
description, and to have been absolutely unredeemed by any saving feature." He
"left no impurity or licentiousness untouched" (Euseb. H. E. 8. 14; cf. Eutrop.
10. 4; Lact. 9). He was marked by "impiety," "cruelty," "lust," and tyranny
(Paneg. [313] c. 4). He was the most disreputable of all,-- unmitigatedly
disreputable. With all due allowance for the prejudice of Christian historians, from
whom such strong statements are mainly drawn, yet enough of the details are
confirmed by Victor, .Epit., the Panegyrists, Eutropius, and other non-Christian
writers to verify the substantial facts of the ferocity, drunkenness, lust,
covetousness, and oppression of this precious galaxy of rulers.
(3) Condition of the Ruled.
Under such rulers there was a reign of terror during this period which
contrasted strangely with the state of things under Constantine. Galerius was
"driving the empire wild with his taxations" (cf. Lact. c. 23 and 26), affording in
this also a marked contrast with the course of Constantine in Gaul. Maxentius
led in the unbridled exercise of passion (Euseb. H. E. 8. 14; cf. Lact, c. 18),
but in this he differed from the others little except in degree (compare
Euseb. V. C. 1. 55 on Licinius), and according to Lactantius (c. 28) he was
surpassed by Maximin. In brief, all did according to their own sweet wills, and the
people had to stand it as best they could. The worst was that the oppression did
not end with the emperors nor the friends and officials to whom they delegated
power to satisfy their desires at the expense of the helpless. Their armies were
necessary to them. The soldiers had to be conciliated and exactions made to
meet their demands. They followed the examples of their royal leaders in all
manner of excesses and oppressions. No property or life or honor was safe.
The persecution of the Christians reached a climax of horror in this
period. The beginning of the tenth persecution was, to be sure, a little before this
(303), but its main terror was in this time. Galerius and Maximian are said
indeed to have persecuted less during this period, and Maxentius not at all; but
Galerius was the real author and sanguinary promoter of the persecution which
is ascribed to Diocletian (Lact. c. 11), while Maximian was, in 304, the author
of the celebrated "Fourth Edict" which made death the penalty of Christianity,
and Maxentius was only better because impartial--he persecuted both Christian
and heathen (Euseb. V. C. 1. 33-6; H. E. 8. 14; Eutrop. 10. 4). (1) The
persecution under Maximin was of peculiar atrocity (Euseb. H. E. 8. 17; 9. 6, &c.;
Lact. c. 26-27), so that the whole of this period in the East, excepting a slight
breathing space in 308, was a terror to Christians, and it is said that "these
two years were the most prolific of bloodshed of any in the whole history of
Roman persecutions" (Marriott, in Smith & W. 2, p. 594. It was not until the very
end of this period (1) that Galerius, in terror of death, issued the famous
first edict of toleration. (2) Such was the condition of things in July, 311. The
deaths of Severus in 307, Maximian in 310, and Galerius in 311, had cleared the
stage so far as to leave but four Augusti, Licinius and Maximin in the East,
Constantine and Maxentius in the West. The only well-ordered and contented
section of the world was that of Constantine. In all the others there was
oppression, excess, and discontent, the state of things at Rome being on the whole the
most outrageous.
This period was most momentous for the world's history. Maxentius, seeking
an excuse for war against Constantine, found it in a pretended desire to
avenge his father (Zos. 2. 14), and prepared for war. (3) Like his father before
him, however, he did not know his man. Constantine's mind was prepared. He was
alert and ready to act. He gathered all the forces, German, Gallic, and British
(Zos. 2. 15) that he could muster, left a portion for the protection of the
Rhine, entered Italy by way of the Alps (Paneg.), and marched to meet the much more
numerous forces of Maxentius,--Romans, Italians, Tuscans, Carthagenians, and
Sicilians (Zos. 2. 15). (4) First Sigusium was taken by storm (Naz. Paneg. [321]
C. 17 and 21; Paneg. [313] c. 5); then the cavalry of Maxentius was defeated at
Turin (Naz. Paneg. [321] c. 22; Paneg. [313] c. 6). After a few days' rest in
Milan Paneg. [313] c. 7) he continued his triumphant march, defeating the enemy
again in a cavalry engagement at Brescia (Naz. Paneg. c. 25), and taking the
strongly fortified Verona after a hard-fought battle before the walls (Anon.
Vales. p. 473; Paneg. [313]; Naz. Paneg. c. 25-26). This had taken him out of his
way a little; but now there were no enemies in the rear, and he was free to
push on to Rome, on his way whither, if not earlier, he had his famous vision of
the cross. (5) He reached the Tiber October 26. Maxentius, tempted by a dubious
oracle (6) issued from Rome, crossed the Tiber, and joined battle. His
apparently unwise action in staking so much on a pitched battle has its explanation, if
we could believe Zosimus (2. 15), Eusebius ( V. C. 1. 38), Praxagoras, and
others. His object was, it is said, by a feigned retreat to tempt Constantine
across the bridge of boats which he had built in such a way that it could be
broken, and the enemy let into the river. (7) If it was a trick, he at least fell
into his own pit. The dissipated soldiers of Maxentius gave way before the hardy
followers of Constantine, fired by his own energy and the sight of the cross.
The defeat was a rout. The bridge broke. Maxentius, caught in the jam, was cast
headlong into the river (Anon. Val. p. 473; Lact. c. 44; Chron. Pasch. p. 521,
&c.); and after a vain attempt to climb out on the steep bank opposite (Paneg.
[313] c. 17), was swept away by the stream. The next day his body was found, the
head cut off (Praxag.; Anon. Vales. p. 473), and carried into the city (Anon.
Vales. p. 473) on the point of a spear (Paneg. [313] c. 18; Zos. 2. 17; Praxag.
p. 1). Constantine entered the city in triumph amid rejoicings of the people,
(1) exacted penalties from a few of those most intimate with Maxentius (Zos. 2.
17), (2) disbanded the Praetorian Guards (Vict. Caes. p. 159; Zos. 2. 17),
raised a statue to himself, and did many other things which are recorded; and if
he did as many things which are not recorded as there are recorded things which
he did not do, he must have been very busy in the short time he remained there.
(3)
Constantine was now sole emperor in the West, and the emperors were
reduced to three. History was making fast. After a very brief stay in Rome he
returned to Milan (Lact. c. 45), where Licinius met him (Anon. Vales. p. 473; Lact. c.
25; Vict. Epit. p. 50; Zos. 2. 17, &c.). It had become of mutual advantage to
these emperors to join alliance. So a betrothal had been made, and now the
marriage of Licinius to the sister of Constantine was celebrated (cf. refs. above
Lact.; Vict.; Zos.; Anon. Vales.). At the same time the famous Second Edict or
Edict of Milan was drawn up by the two emperors (Euseb. H. E. 10. 5; Lact. c.
48), and probably proclaimed. (4) Constantine then returned to Gaul (Anon. Vales.
p. 473; Zos. 11. 17), where he was forced into another sort of strenuous
warfare-- the ecclesiastical, taking a hand somewhat against his will in trying to
settle the famous Donatist schism. (5)
Licinius had a more critical problem to meet. Maximin thought it a good
time to strike while Licinius was off in Milan engaged in festivities (Lact. c.
45); but the latter, hastily gathering his troops and pushing on by forced
marches, met near Heraclea and utterly defeated him (Lact. c. 46). Maximin fled
precipitately, escaping the sword only to die a more terrible death that same
summer (Lact. c. 49; Euseb. V. C. 1. 58; cf. Zos. 2. 17). (6) The death of Maximin
cleared the field still farther. Through progressive subtractions the number of
emperors had been reduced to two, -- one in the East and one in the West.
They, too, promptly fell out. The next year they were at war. Causes and
pretexts were various; but the pretext, if not the cause, was in general that
Licinius proved an accomplice after the fact, at least, to a plot against
Constantine. (7) Whatever the immediate cause, it was one of the inevitabilities of
fate. Another vigorous campaign followed, characterized by the same decisive
action and personal courage on the part of Constantine which he had already shown,
and which supplied his lack of soldiers. (1) First at Cibalis in Pannonia
(Oct. 8), (2) then in a desperate battle at Mardia, Licinius was defeated and
forced to make peace (Anon. Vales. p. 474; Zos. a. 19-20). The world was re-divided
between the affectionate brothers-in-law, and Constantine took Illyrium to his
other possessions. (3) After this battle and the re-division there was a truce
between the emperors for some years, during the early part of which (in 316 or
315) the Decennalia of Constantine were celebrated (Euseb. V. C. 1. 48).
About the time of his decennial celebration, (4) his sons Crispus and
Constantine, and Licinius, son of Licinius, were made Caesars. The peace between
the emperors continued during the whole of this period. There was more or less
fighting with the frontier tribes, Crispus, e.g., defeating the Franks in 320
(Naz. Paneg. c. 3. 17?), but the main interest of the period does not lie in its
wars. It was a period of legislation and internal improvement (cf. Laws of 319,
320, 321, collected in Clinton, 1, p. 9; also De Broglie, I. 1, 296-97). Early
in the period he was at Milan, where the Donatist matter, which had been
dragging along since 311, came up for final settlement (cf. note, above). He was also
at one time or another at Aries and at Rome, but the latter and greater part
of the period was spent mainly in Dacia and Pannonia (cf. Laws, as above). The
close of his fifteen years was celebrated somewhat prematurely at Rome, in the
absence of Constantine, by the oration of Nazarius (cf. Naz. Paneg.).
If the third period was relatively quiet the fourth was absolutely
stirring. There had undoubtedly been more or less fighting along the Danube frontier
during the preceding years, but early in this period there was a most important
campaign against the Sarmatians, in which they were defeated and their king
taken prisoner. (5) In honor of this victory coins were struck (Eckhel, Doct. Num.
Vet. 8 (1827) 87). But this was only skirmishing; afterwards came the tug of
war. Nine years of peace proved the utmost limit of mutual patience, and
Constantine and Licinius came to words, and from words to blows. For a long time
Constantine had been vexed at the persecution of the Christians by Licinius (cf.
Euseb. H. E. 10. 8, 9), persecutions waged perhaps with the express purpose of
aggravating him. (6) Licinius, on the other hand, naturally chagrined over the
previous loss of territory, knowing of Constantine's indignation over his
persecutions, and perhaps suspecting him of further designs, was naturally suspicious
when Constantine passed within his boundaries in pursuing the Sarmatians (Anon.
Vales. p. 474). Mutual recriminations and aggravations followed. Licinius would
not let the Sarmatian coins pass current and had them melted down (Anon.
Contin. Dio. Cass., in Müller, Fragm. Hist. Gr. 4 [1868] 199). Altogether they soon
came to blows. The steps were short, sharp, decisive. Constantine defeated
Licinius by land (July 3, 323), and through Crispus, by sea (Soz. 1. 7; Anon.
Vales. p. 474-5; Zos. 2. 22-3). After the defeat at Adrianople, Licinius retreated
to Byzantium (Zos. 2. 23-5; Vict. Epit. p. 50), and then to Chalcedon (Anon.
Vales. p. 475, Zos. 2. 25-6). Two months after the first victory (Sept. 18) a
final and decisive battle was fought at Chrysopolis (1) (Anon. Vales. p. 475; Socr.
1. 4). Licinius surrendered on condition that his life should be spared (Zos.
28), or rather Constantia secured from her brother the promise that his life
should be spared (Anon. Vales. p. 475; Vict. Epit. p. 50; Pseudo-Leo, p. 85,
&c.). He retired to Nicomedia, residing at Thessalonica (Soz. 1. 7; Pseudo-Leo,
&c.), but was put to death the following year. (2) Constantine was now sole
emperor. His first act (Soz. 1. 8) was to issue a proclamation-in favor of the
Christians (Soz. l.c.; F. C. 2. 24- , and 48- ). This was followed by many other acts
in their favor, --building of churches, &c. (cf. Euseb. V. C., and notes).
From this time on he was much identified with Christian affairs, and the main
events are given in extenso by Eusebius (see various notes). In 325 (June 19-Aug.
25) the Council of Nicaea was held (cf. Euseb. V. C. 3. 6, and notes), and
Constantine took an active part in its proceedings. The same year his Vicennalia
were celebrated at Nicomedia (Euseb. V. C. 1. 1; Hieron.; Cassiod.) and the
following year at Rome also (Hieron., Cassiod., Prosper, Idat.), Constantine being
present at both celebrations, (3) being thus at Rome in July, and passing during
the year as far as Arles, apparently spending some time at Milan (cf. the
various laws in Clinton, v.)
The beginning of this period was the beginning of the series of acts which
have taken most from the reputation of Constantine. Sometime in 326, perhaps
while at Rome, he ordered the death of his son Crispus. (4) The same year
(Hieron. Chron.) the Caesar Licinius, his sister's son, was put to death (Eutrop. 10.
6; Hieron.; Prosper.), and shortly after (5) his wife Fausta died or was put
to death. (6) But apart from this shadow, the period was hardly less brilliant,
in its way, than preceding ones. It was a time of gigantic and, as some said,
extravagant internal improvements. Among various enterprises was the refounding,
in 327, of Drepanum, his mother's city, as Helenopolis (Hieron. An. 2343;
Chron. Pasch. p. 283(?); Socr. H. E. 1. 18; Soz. 2. 2; Theoph. p. 41), and greatest
of all, the transformation of the insignificant Byzantium into the magnificent
Constantinople, (7) which was dedicated in 330 (Idatius; Chron. Pasch. p. 285;
Hesych. § 42; Hieron.; cf. Clinton). (8) It was probably during this period,
too, that the work of improvement in Jerusalem was undertaken, and Helena made
her famous visit thither (Euseb. V. C. 3. 42; Soz. 21; Socr. 1. 17; Ephraem. p.
24: Theoph. 37-8, &c.).
The main event of the last full five-year period of this reign was the
Gothic war (Hieron. An. 2347; Idat.; Oros. c. 28; Anon. Vales. p. 476; Eutrop. 10.
7; Vict. Caes. p. 352; cf. Soz. 1. 26), undertaken in behalf of the Sarmatians
(Anon. Vales. l.c.), carried on by Constantine II., and brought to an end
April 20, 332 (cf. Clinton). The following year (333) Constans was made consul
(Idat.; Hieron.; Prosper has 332; cf. Zos. 2. 35; Vict. Caes. p. 161, &c.), and in
334 the remarkable (Anon. Vales.) incorporation of 300,000 Sarmatians into the
empire (Anon. Vales. p. 476; Idat.; Hieron.; cf. Ammian. 17. 12, 18; 17. 13;
19. 12; V. C. 4. 6). This same year Calocaerus revolted in Crete and was defeated
(Anon. Vales. p. 476; Vict. Caes. p. 161; Oros. c. 28; Hieron.). The following
year (335) Constantine celebrated his tricennalia, and Dalmatius was made
Caesar (Idat.; Hieron. An. 340; Vict. Caes. p. 161; Anon. Vales. p. 476; Chron.
Pasch. p. 532; Vict. Epit. p. 51; Oros. c. 28), making now four Caesars and a
nondescript (cf. Anon. Vales. p. 476),-- Constantine II., Constantius, Constans,
Dalmatius, and Hannibalianus, among whom the world was now partitioned (Anon.
Vales. p. 476; Zos. 2. 39; Vict. Epit. p. 52).
Later in this year, Constantine is known to have been at Jerusalem, where
he dedicated a church (V. C. 4. 40; Chron. Pasch., but wrong year). It was also
the year of the Synods of Tyre (Athanas. c. Ar. 1. p. 788; V. C. 4.41; Theod.
1. 28). The same year, or early in the following one, Eusebius pronounced his
tricennial oration (see Special Prolegomena). In 337 the Great Emperor died at
Ancyrona, near Nicomedia, just as he was preparing for an expedition against the
Persians, and was buffed in the Church of the Apostles, at Constantinople (cf.
notes on Eusebius' Life of Constantine). (1)
CHAPTER II. CHARACTER.
A man's character consists of an inherited personality enlarged, modified,
or disfigured by his own repeated voluntary acts. A sufficiently exhaustive
survey of such character may be made under the rubrics of: 1. Inherited
characteristics. 2. Physical characteristics. 3. Mental characteristics. 4. Moral
characteristics. 5. Religious characteristics.
The character of Constantine has been so endlessly treated, with such
utter lack of agreement, that it seems hopeless to try to reach any dear results in
a study of it. "Who shall decide when doctors disagree?" "How shall I go about
it to find what sort of a man Constantine really was ?" Certainly nothing can
be gained by that method which chooses a few acts or characteristics to which
shifting tests of various philosophies are applied. Nor can any haphazard
selection and stringing together of traits give what is by its nature a synthesis of
them all. Like any other scientific study, the first condition of method is
that it be systematic. Then, a character generalization is worth just so much, no
more, as the grounds on which it is based. To get a man's character from
secondary sources, from other men's generalizations, is a hopelessly will-of-the-wisp
effort. Again, another vice of characterization as usually practised is the
interpretation of the whole by a part rather than the part by the whole. The
individual act is thus made the standard of character. To get at what this
personality called Constantine was therefore requires a systematic survey of the
primary sources with a view to getting the ensemble that the eccentric may be judged
by the normal. In such survey the main thing is the body of analyzed and
grouped facts. The editor's summary, like any summary, is worth only what the facts
are worth. This method, however imperfectly carried out, is at least better than
rambling observations of incoherent phenomena; and has therefore been adopted
in this attempt to find out what sort of a man this Constantine was;
Physically, Mentally, Morally, Spiritually.
- 2. Inherited Characteristics.
The fact of the inheritance of character, virtues or vices as the case may
be, curiously recognized in various nations and ancient philosophies (cf.
Ribot. Heredity, N.Y. 1875, p. 375-6), and even in the ten commandments, has
received the clearer exposition of modern science. In view of it, a scientific study
of character considers antecedent generations. Biography rests properly on
genealogy. Constantine's father, Constantius Chlorus, was a man of great mildness,
self-possession, and philosophic virtue, just, and a Neo-Platonist of the best
type, a monotheist and philanthropist (cf. Sinclair, in Smith & W. 1. 661-2).
Constantine is said to have inherited his father's strength, courage, personal
appearance (Eumen. Paneg. c. 4), piety (Pseud.Leo, p. 83; cf. Const. and Euseb.
in V. C. 2. 49), and general virtues. The slur of Zosimus on the character of
Constantine's mother seems to have been quite gratuitous. Her relation to
Constantius was in nowise incompatible with virtue, and the honor afterwards paid
her, along with the indisputable good early training of Constantine which was with
her, indicate a woman of unusual character. The later enterprise and activity
with the honors and responsibilities given her show her to have been of very
considerable energy and ability.
- 3. Physical Characteristics.
A graphic picture of his personal appearance is drawn by Cedrenus (p.
472-3). "Constantinus Magnus was of medium height, broad-shouldered, thick-necked,
whence his epithet Bull-necked. His complexion was ruddy, his hair neither
thick nor crisp curling, his beard scanty and not growing in many places, his nose
slightly hooked, and his eyes like the eyes of a lion. He was joyous of heart
and most cheery of countenance." (1) Many points in this description are
confirmed by others, some apparently contradicted. Taken in detail, his Height was
probably above medium. Over against this statement of Cedrenus (p. 472) that he
was of middle height is that of the earlier Malalas (13. 1 ), who, while
confirming the ruddiness of complexion, characterizes him as tall, and the explicit
testimony of Eusebius, that among those with Diocletian "there was no one
comparable with him for height" (V. C. 1. 19), and likewise among those present at
Nicaea ( V. C. 3- 10). But a "thick-necked" form hardly belongs to the strictly
"tall" man, and a thick neck and broad shoulders would hardly belong to a form of
"distinguished comeliness," if it were short (Lact. c. 18). It may be supposed
therefore that he can be described as above medium height. Moreover, there
would naturally have been more mention of height by Lactantius and Panegyrists if
it had been very extraordinary. In respect of Countenance he was undoubtedly
handsome. The "majestic beauty of his face" mentioned by Theophanes (p. 29; cf. V.
C. 1. 19; 3. 10) is confirmed by suggestions in the Panegyrists (e.g. Eumen.
c. 17; Naz. c. 24), and all general testimony, and not belied by the coins. His
Complexion was ruddy; "reddish" in the expression of Cedrenus (p. 272), "fiery"
in that of Malalas (13. 1). His Hair, rather thin and straight, scanty Beard,
and "slightly hooked" Nose are shown also by the coins, where the nose varies
from a pronounced Roman or ungraceful eagle's beak to a very proportionate,
slightly aquiline member. His Eyes were lion-like (Cedren.), piercingly bright
(Paneg. 313, c. 19; also Eumen.). His Expression was bright and joyous (Cedren.),
characterized by "noble gravity mingled with hilarity" (Naz. Paneg. c. 24), by
"serenity" and "cheerfulness" (cf. Euseb. V. C. 3. 11 ). In brief, he seems to
have been a type of the sanguine temperament.
Added to his beauty of face was an unquestioned beauty of form. His
distinguished comeliness of Figure (Lact. c. 18) is a favorite theme with his
enthusiastic friend Eusebius, who says, "No one was comparable with him for grace and
beauty of person" (cf. Eumen. c. 17; V. C. 1. 19; 3. 10), and that his figure
was "manly and vigorous" (1. 20). The broad Shoulders and thick Neck prepare one
for the testimony to his great bodily Strength. The feats of personal valor in
combat with the Sarmatian champions and the wild beasts (cf. above), his
personal energy in battle (e.g. before Verona; cf. above), much special testimony
(e.g. Eumen. Paneg. c. 4) and all the general testimony, show that the
superlative language of Eusebius is well grounded, and interpreted with conservative
imagination is to be taken as fact. According to him, "he so far surpassed his
compeers in personal strength as to be a terror to them" (V. C. 1. 19), and in
respect of Vigor of body was such that at the Council of Nicaea his very beating
showed that he surpassed all present in "invincible strength and vigor"; while at
the age of sixty or upwards, "he still possessed a sound and vigorous body,
free from all blemish and of more than youthful vivacity; a noble mien and
strength equal to any exertion, so that he was able to join in martial exercises, to
ride, endure the fatigues of travel, engage in battle," &c. (Vict. 4. 53). In
Bearing he was "manly" (V. C. 1. 20), self-possessed, calm (V. C. 3. 11),
dignified ("noble gravity," Naz. c. 24; of. Eumen. &c.), with "majestic dignity of
mien" ( V. C. 3. 10) and serenity ( V. C. 3. 10). In Manners he was "suave"
(<greek>epieikhd</greek>) ( V. C. 3. 10) and "affable to all" ( V. C. 3. 13). This
singular affability was such, according to Lactantius (c. 18), as to endear him
greatly to his soldiers. Over against this, however, must be set the statement
of Victor, Epit. that he was "a scoffer [irrisor] rather than suave [blandus]"
(Vict. Epit. 51). But this seems rounded on a false exegesis (cf. above) and
withal there is no absolute contradiction. Moreover, all his intercourse with
bishops, deputies, soldiers, citizens, barbarians, seems to have generally made a
favorable impression, and such success without affability of manner would have
been marvelous. In Dress his taste, late in life at least, became somewhat
gorgeous. If he were reigning to-day, the comic papers would undoubtedly represent
him, like some other good and great men, with exaggerated red neckties and
figured waistcoats. He "always wore a diadem," according to Victor, Epit. (p. 51),
and according to many (Malal. 13. 7-8; Cedren.; Pseudo-Leo, &c.) "none of the
emperors before him" wore the diadem at all. Eusebius' description of his
appearance at the Council of Nicaea would do credit to a Washington reporter on
wedding-toilets; he was "clothed in raiment which glittered, as it were, with rays
of light, reflecting the glowing radiance of a purple robe, and adorned with the
brilliant splendor of gold and precious stones" (V. C. 3. 10).
- 4. Mental Characteristics.
According to his biographer-friend, Constantine was even more conspicuous
for the excellence of his psychical qualities than his physical ( V. C. 1. 19).
Among these qualities are natural intelligence ( V. C. 1. 19), sound judgment
( V. C. 1. 19), well-disciplined power of thought (Theoph. p. 29), and
peculiarly, as might be expected from his eye and general energy, penetration (Theoph.
p. 29). In respect of Education, it is said on the one hand that he "reaped the
advantages of a liberal education" (V. C. 1. 19), and particularly that he was
thoroughly trained in the art of reasoning (V. C.); but according to Anonymous
Vales. (p. 471), and also Cedrenus (p. 473), his literary education was
scanty. If there was early lack, he made up for it afterwards with characteristic
energy, for he attained very considerable erudition (of a sort) for an emperor, as
is shown in his Oration. According to Eutropius he was devoted to liberal
studies. According to Lydus he was skilled both in the science of letters and the
science of arms; for "if he had not excelled in both sciences, he would not have
been made emperor of the Romans" (Lydus, de Magist. 3.33), --a somewhat
subjective ground. Such was his devotion to study that, according to Eusebius (V. C.
4. 20), "he sometimes passed sleepless nights in furnishing his mind with
divine knowledge." The measure of his thoroughness may be gathered from the fact
that his knowledge of Greek even, does not seem to have been very extensive --"
with which he was not altogether unacquainted" ( V. C. 3. 13). His learning, as
shown in his orations, is the learning of a man of affairs, and has many
elements of crudity and consequent pretentiousness; but he is no worse than many
authors--much better than most royal authors.
His learning had at least the excellent quality that it was radiated with
reference to expression, as all sound learning must be. According to Eusebius,
much of his time was spent in composing discourses, many of which he delivered
in public (K C. 4. 29), and he continued to the last to compose discourses and
to deliver frequent orations in public.
The description by Eusebius of the character of his orations (V. C. 4. 24)
seems to forbid any assumption of pure vanity as his motive. It is the most
natural thing in the world that an emperor should make speeches, and that he
should speak on scholastic or religious themes, and with the use of classical
philosophy, mythology, and literature, should be no surprise in the days of
President Harrison, Mr. Gladstone, and the Emperor William. There is no doubt he wrote
and spoke vigorously and effectively to hi soldiers, and on political and
judicial matters (witness his laws), and his learned literary production is very
fair amateur work, considering. In the Delivery of his speeches he seems to have
had self-possession and modesty of manner, as e.g. at the Council of Nicaea,
where "he looked serenely around on the assembly with a cheerful aspect, and
having collected his thoughts in a calm and gentle tone . . . proceeded to speak"
(V. C. 3. 11). His Literary style was somewhat inflated and verbose, but for
this, compare Special Prolegamena. His Patronage of learning showed his interest in
it. Following his father's example and continuing his work, he encouraged the
schools in Gaul (cf. above). Hosius and Eusebius were his friends and
counselors. He made Lactantius tutor to Crispus (Hieron. Chron.). He had copies of the
Scriptures made and distributed (V. C. 3. 1). In short, he especially
"encouraged the study of letters" (Vict. Epit. 51) in every way.
- 5. Moral Characteristics.
(a) In relations with events, things, or persons. First of all,
Constantine excelled in Energy, that fundamental of all developed character. He was
pre-eminent for masculine strength of character (Theoph. p. 29), a man of energy
(vir ingens, Eutrop. 10. 1). This was manifested at every turn, in his successful
military activity under Diocletian, in the decisive acts at the time of leaving
him, in the prosecution of campaigns against Maximian, Maxentius, Licinius, in
the wholesale way in which he pushed internal improve merits, the building of
Constantinople, the multiplication of Christian houses of worship, in his
studies, in his law-making; in short, in everything he touched there was the same
teeming, resistless energy of the man. His Determination was "bent on effecting
whatever he had settled in his mind" (Eutrop. 10. 5). His Rapidity of action
when he rejoined his father is described by Lactantius as incredible (Lact. c.
24). He showed the same alacrity in his quick return and surprise of Maximian, in
his first entry into Italy, and in his campaign against Licinius. This energy
and activity rose to positive Impetuosity, which led him at Verona, before Rome,
and at Cibalis to plunge into the midst of battle, communicating his own
resistless, indomitable, alert will to do, to his soldiers. Closely linked with
these qualities was that personal Courage and Valor, inherited from his father
(Paneg. 307, c. 3), mentioned by Eusebius ( K C. 1. 11), and explicitly or
implicitly by almost every one. This most indubitable of all his qualities was
witnessed to even by the scoffing Julian as "inexpressibly" great (Oral. p. 13), and
mentioned even in the work whose chief aim seems, almost, to detract from
Constantine (Caes. p. 23). United with all these characteristics of greatness was a
far-reaching Ambition. This on the one hand is represented to be an ambition for
power and glory. He was "exceedingly ambitious of military glory" (Eutrop. 10.
7); "aspiring to the sovereignty of the whole world" (Eutrop. 10. 5). According
to Zosimus, at the time of the appointment of Severus and Maximin, already
having his mind set on attaining royalty he was roused to a greater desire by the
honor conferred on Severus and Maximin, and this eager desire of power was
already well known to many. On the other hand, this ambition is represented to be a
burning zeal for righting wrongs; his wars against Maxentius and Licinius real
crusades, and his actual objective in all things the reform to be effected. If
the fruit proves the motive, this was so; for he consistently used or tried to
use his power for what he thought public good. This he did in Gaul, after his
victories, in his legislation, and in his internal improvements.
In view of all this powerfulness of personality, it may be said of all
successes of this "man of power" (Eutrop. 10. 5) what Eutropius says of his
success in war, that it was great, "but not more than proportioned to his exertions"
(Eutrop.). With all this energy of personality, however, he was far from being
headstrong. On the contrary, he showed marked Prudence, resembling his father
in this also (Paneg. 307, c. 3). Sustaining so long the delicate position at the
court of Diocletian, all his provision for guarding the frontiers, his
long-suffering in waiting to be confirmed Caesar, in waiting his opportunity to meet
Maxentius, in waiting and getting everything in hand before meeting Licinius,
his wise moderation in demand on the conquered, and the not pressing forward
until he had everything well arranged, show this, and a high degree of Patience
withal. This latter virtue was peculiarly characteristic whether exercised in
respect of things or plans or people, and his great patience in listening to
complaints (Naz. c. 24) is only a part of the whole. As he was patient, so he was
distinguished for Perseverance, and "firm and unshaken" (Theoph. p. 29)
Steadfastness. So great energy united with these other qualities barely needs testimony
to suggest great Faithfulness to his tasks in hand, as in that "strict attention
to his military duties" which Lactantius says (c. 18) characterized him as a
young man. In brief, his whole personality was a marked example of that balance
of power and the measuring of remote ends which is included under the word
Self-control, in the use of the philosophy of which he, as well as his father, was
a disciple. In this exercise of his great energy towards himself he was
recognized to be remarkable. This self-control was manifested especially in his
unusual Chastity. As a young man he was marked by correct moral habits (probis
moribus, Lact. c. 18). The specific testimony of Eusebius to this (V. C.) would have
comparatively little weight on a point like this, and the same might be said,
in a measure, of the testimony of the Panegyrists (Naz. c. 24; 207, c. 4; 313,
c. 4), who mention this virtue. But panegyrical art would forbid the laudation
of what was conspicuously lacking; rather it would not be mentioned, and the
general testimony goes to show at least a contemporary reputation for
extraordinary continence, considering his time and environment. His relationship with
Minervina hardly touches this reputation, whether she was wife or only legitimate
concubine. The accusations and innuendoes of Julian, Caesars, have, in any fairly
critical estimate, hardly more than the weight of some malignant gossip whose
backbiting is from his own heart. "Honi soit qui mat y pense." Like Licinius,
he seems to have been unable to understand that purity of heart which permitted
the free companionship of women in social or religious life. Julian's general
charge of luxuriousness and sensuousness (P. 43, 306, 25, 38, 42, &c.) must be
regarded largely in the same light; for this delight in soft garments, precious
gems, games, and festivities was, if we can judge aright, in no sense
"enervating pleasure and voluptuous indulgence": for he was indefatigable in studies and
works of all sorts, although it is perhaps to be referred to the vanity and
love of display of which he is accused, and of which more later.
(b) In relations with people. In general he was Amiable,--popular with the
soldiers, popular even with his subdued enemies (Eutrop. 10. 7). Diocletian
reminded Galerius (Lact. c. 18) that he was "amiable," and he must have been so;
for he was "loved by soldiers" (Eumen. c. 16), and so "endeared to the troops"
that in the appointment of Caesar he was "the choice of every individual"
(Lact. c. 18). This popularity he indeed "sought by every kind of liberality and
obligingness" (Eutr. 10. 7.), but what he sought he found.
A very large element in this popularity was the universal Mildness,
Mercifulness, and Forbear-once which he showed. In these is found a class of
characteristics which stand alongside his energy of character as peculiarly
characteristic and great. "He whose familiar habit it was to save men's lives" (V. C. 4.
6), as a young man promised, in the opinion of Diocletian (Lact. c. 18), to be
"milder and more merciful than his father." Even in the opinion of Julian he was
"far more humane (<greek>praoUerou</greek>), and in very many other respects
superior to others, as I would demonstrate if there were opportunity" (Julian,
Orat. p. 15); and he again (p. 96) speaks of him in laudatory terms as
contrasted with the other emperors. Eusebius, as might be expected, is still stronger in
expression, and sets Constantine "in contrast with tyrants who were stained
with blood of countless numbers," saying that in Constantine's reign "the sword
of justice lay idle," and men were "rather constrained by a paternal authority
than governed by the stringent power of the laws" ( K C. 3. 1). This
mercifulness he manifested on every occasion. "When Sigusium was on fire," he directed
greater effort towards saving it than he had to capturing it (Naz. Paneg. c. 21).
At the taking of Rome he punished a certain few only of those most intimate
with Maxentius (Zos.), and even Zosimus notes the great joy and relief of people
at the exchange of Constantine for Maxentius. It is noticeable that in the
inscriptions the epithet "clementissimus," most rare of other emperors, is found a
considerable number of times of him. So great was this mildness of conduct that
he was "generally blamed for his clemency" (V. C. 4. 31), on the ground that
crimes were not visited with their proper penalties. The testimony to this
humaneness of character is almost unlimited and conclusive, but there is more or less
evidence which is urged in qualification or contradiction. It is rather a
common thing to say that he was at first mild, but later pride of prosperity caused
him greatly to depart from this former agreeable mildness of temper (Eutrop.).
Then the execution of the various members of his own family (cf. discussion
below), the exposure of prisoners to the wild beasts (Eumen. Paneg. c. 12), his
severe decree against those who should conceal copies of the works of Arius
(Socr. 1. 9), his treatment of the Jews (Greg. Niceph., or at least his laws), and
the severe penalties of some of his laws are among the points brought against
him. But the remark of Eutropius is to be interpreted by the "former agreeable
mildness of temper," to which he himself witnesses, and the fact that this
latter period was that where the points of view of the two men had widely diverged.
The exposure of prisoners to wild beasts was no evidence of cruelty in itself;
for under the customs then prevailing it might have been cruelty to his
subjects not to have done this, and his treatment of the barbarian enemies is rather
to be interpreted in the light of the testimony of Eutropius that he "left on
the minds of the barbarians [Goths] a strong remembrance of his kindness" (10.
7). His treatment of his family is discussed elsewhere, but whatever its bearings
may be, there is no just historico-psychological ground whatever for the use
of the word which is so freely bandied,-cruelty. Cruel he was not in any sense.
Even the extreme of the Panegyrist who says to him, "you are such by
inheritance and destiny that you cannot be cruel" (Eumen. Paneg. c. 14), is nearer the
truth. The penalties of his laws lay him open in a degree to a charge of growing
severity; but it was great, if sometimes mistaken and overzealous, regard for
what he deemed the public welfare, and on quite a different plane from anything
which we express as cruelty. Though with the growing conservatism of a man who
finds his purposes of mercy continually perverted and his indulgences abused,
he yet remained to the end of his life most merciful and mild compared with
those who went before and who followed.
This fact becomes more clear in seeing how he excelled in kindred virtues.
The Patience already mentioned, distinguished forbearance, and undoubted
benevolence, or at least generosity, are traits which group with mercy and have no
fellowship with cruelty. And these he had. He showed distinguished Forbearance,
and that oftentimes, as in a disturbance at Antioch, where he "applied with
much forbearance the remedy of persuasion" (V. C. 3. 59). The outrageous conduct
of those who, in the Arian disturbances, dared "even to insult the statues of
the emperor . . . had little power to excite his anger, but rather caused in him
sorrow of spirit" (V. C. 3' 4), "and he endured with patience men who were
exasperated against himself." These words are by Eusebius, to be sure.; but his
conduct with Donatists, Arians, Maximinianus, and Licinius, in individual and on
the whole, show that in fact he did habitually exercise great forbearance. 'To
this was added much activity of positive Kindness. On first accession he
"visited with much considerate kindness all those provinces" (V. C. p. 23). This
kindness was shown throughout his reign, and brightly illustrated in his treatment
of the persecuted Christians from the beginning,--in his acts in Gaul, in his
famous toleration edict, in his letter to Maximin, and in his acts throughout.
After his victory over Maxentius came the edict that those wrongfully deprived of
their estates should be permitted to enjoy them again, . . . unjustly exiled
were recalled and freed from imprisonment (Euseb. V. C. 1. 41). After the
victory over Licinius he recalled Christian exiles, ordered restitution of property,
released from labor in mines, from the solitude of islands, from toil in public
works, &c., those who had been oppressed in these ways (V. C. p. 70-71). There
is strong concensus of testimony to a very lovable habitual exercise of this
trait in his "readiness to grant hearing," "patience in listening," and
"kindness of response" to those whose complaints he had patiently listened to (Naz.
24). He was most excellent (commadissimus) to hear embassies and complaints of
provinces (Vict. Epit. p. 51),--a testimony which is borne out by the facts. His
Generosity is equally undoubted. His magnificent gifts and largesses to the army
were still remembered in the time of Julian (Oral. p. 13). His constant and
lavish giving to the Christians is Eusebius' unending theme: but it was not to
the churches alone; for we read of his munificence to heathen tribes (V. C. 2.
22), his liberality to the poor (V. C. 1. 43) in giving money for clothing,
provision for orphans and widows, marriage portions for virgins, compensation to
losers in law suits (V. C. 4. 4). It was "scarcely possible to be near him without
benefit" (V. C. I. 43; cf. V. C. 3. 16; 3. 22; 4. 44).
Though slow to serve some friends through suspicion (i.e. dubius thus
explained), he was" exceedingly generous towards others, neglecting no opportunity
to add to their riches and honors" (Eutrop. 10. 7). "With royal magnificence he
unlocked all his treasures and distributed his gifts with rich and high-souled
liberality" (V. C. 3. I). He seems to have carried it rather to excess, even
on the showing of Eusebius. "No one could request a favor of the emperor, and
fail of obtaining what he sought. . . . He devised new dignities, that he might
invest a larger number with the tokens of his favor" (V. C. 4. 2). It is worth
giving the account by Eusebius of this conduct in full here. He says (V. C. 4.
54) that this "was a virtue, however, which subjected him to censure from many,
in consequence of the baseness of wicked men, who ascribed their own crimes to
the emperor's forbearance. In truth, I can myself bear testimony to the
grievous evils which prevailed during those times: I mean the violence of rapacious
and unprincipled men, who preyed on all classes of society alike, and the
scandalous hypocrisy of those who crept into the church. . . . His own benevolence and
goodness of heart, the genuineness of his own faith, and his truthfulness of
character induced the emperor to credit the professions of those reputed
Christians who craftily preserved the semblance of sincere affection for his person.
The confidence he reposed in such men sometimes forced him into conduct unworthy
of himself, of which envy took advantage to cloud in this respect the luster
of his character." There seems, therefore, some ground for the charge of
prodigality, that he "wasted public money in many useless buildings, some of which he
shortly after destroyed because they were not built to stand" (Zos.), and (Zos.
p. 104) "gave great largesses to ill-deserving persons, mistaking profusion
for munificence" (<greek>Uhu</greek> <greek>gar</greek> <greek>aswtian</greek>
<greek>hUeito</greek> <greek>filotimian</greek>). Zosimus adds that to do this,
he "imposed severe taxes on all, so severe that fathers were obliged to
prostitute their daughters to raise the money, that tortures were employed, and in
consequence whole villages depopulated." This testimony is, however, by one
bitterly prejudiced, who regarded money spent on Christian houses of worship as worse
than wasted, and indicates only what appears from Eusebius as well, that
expenditures for cities, schools, and churches built, and for other matters, must
have been enormous. But so, too, they were enormous under other emperors, and
Constantine, at least, instead of spending on debauchery, seems to have had
something to show for it. As to taxes, Zosimus would undoubtedly sympathize with the
Kentucky moonshiners in their "oppression" by revenue officers, if he were here
now and Constantine were President, and would fulminate in the dally papers
against the wicked party which by its wicked tariff compels men to marry their
daughters to rich husbands in order to get their taxes paid,--and incidental
luxuries supplied. But that does not say that an exorbitant tariff, to supply "jobs"
which shall furnish rich "spoils" for those who have "pulls" out of the
pockets of the many, is good; yet this, in modern phrase, is about what Constantine
did. Constantine's trust in his friends and generosity to the unworthy, with its
consequences on the tax-payers, reminds strikingly of some of our own
soldier-presidents, whom we love and admire without approving all their acts. And yet,
on the other hand, much of the expenditure was for solid improvement, and could
only be criticised by those who now oppose expenditures for navy, for improved
postal service, public buildings, subsidies, &c.; though yet, again, his
wholesale way of doing things also reminds one of the large generosity of some
modern politicians in their race for popularity, with their Pension, Education,
River and Harbor, and what not liberalities out of the pockets of the people. But
whatever unwisdom may have been mingled, all this profusion shows in him a
generosity of character which was at least amiable, and in the main genuine. His
generosity took also the form of Hospitality, as shown by his entertainings at the
Council of Nicaea (V. C. 4. 49). With all these qualities of amiable
popularity there seems to have been joined a yet more fundamental element, of permanent
influence among men, in a spirit of Justice so marked that the claim of the
Panegyrist is hardly too sweeping when he says that "all who took/refuge with him
for whatever cause he treated justly and liberally" (Paneg. 307. 5)--if there
is added "up to his light and ability." Closely linked with this again is that"
Unbending righteousness" of which Theophanes (p. 29) speaks. And to all these
qualities was added that synthesis of qualities,--a remarkable Tact in his
intercourse with men, a trait typically exemplified in his conduct at the Council of
Nicaea, where "the emperor gave patient audience to all alike, and reviewed
every proposition with steadfast attention, and by occasionally assisting the
arguments of each party in turn, he gradually disposed even the most vehement
disputants to a reconciliation, . . . persuading some, convincing others by his
reasonings, praising those who spoke well, and urging all to unity of sentiment,
until at last he succeeded in bringing them to one mind and judgment respecting
every disputed question" (V. C. 3. 13).
But success with men and popularity seem to have opened that pitfall of
success,--Vanity,-and it is charged that he fell thereinto, although there is
testimony to the exact contrary. According to Victor (Epit. p. 51) he was
"immeasurably greedy of praise." This agrees with, and is at the same time modified by
Eutropius' testimony to his ambition for glory and for honorable popularity
(10. 7), and his apparently complacent reception of the outrageous flattery of
Optatian (cf. his letter), seems at least to show some weakness in this direction.
So again his tendency toward Magnificence, as shown in his assuming the diadem
and his dress in general (cf. above), in the splendor of banquets as witnessed
by his approving friend (V. C. 3. 15 ), his desire to do on a large scale
whatever he did, whether in the building of cities or splendid houses of worship,
or in book-binding ornamentations of pearls and gems. And yet again it is shown
in what seems at this distance his Conceit, sublime in its unconsciousness in
reckoning himself a sort of thirteenth, but, it would seem, a facile princeps
apostle, in the disposition for his burial, "anticipating with extraordinary
fervor of faith that his body would share their title with the apostles themselves.
. . . He accordingly caused twelve coffins to be set up in this church, like
sacred pillars, in honor and memory of the apostolic number, in the centre of
which his own was placed, having six of theirs on either side of it" (V. C. 4.
60). One can seem to read in this a whole history of unblushing flattery, and it
reminds that Eunapius (Vic. aedes. p. 41) has spoken of his pleasure in the
stimulant of "intoxicating flattery." Still it is not to be supposed that this was
a peculiarly weak vanity or an absorbing one. The testimony to his Modesty (V.
C. 3. 10), though by Eusebius, is too circumstantial to be wholly unreal, and
the testimony to his Humility in his "indignation at excessive praise" (V. C.
4. 48), and the records of Eusebius that he "was not rendered arrogant by these
plaudits nor uplifted by the praises" (Euseb. V. C. 1. 39), and of the
Chronicon Paschale (p. 521) that "he was not at all puffed up by the acclamations,"
evidently represent a genuine thing. This mixed character is too frequently met
with to be incomprehensible. Real power, recognizing its own success, glad of the
recognition of others, not at bottom because of cold vanity, but from warm
appreciation of human friendliness, became through success in carrying out what
seemed to him, and were, divine plans, fired with the thought that he was the
especial and necessary minister of God, that his thoughts and will were directly
touched by the Divine Will and thus that whatever he thought or willed was
infallible. He is not unlike some modern rulers. The spirit, though one of real
vanity, or egotism at least, has an element of nobleness in it, and in most of its
manifestations commands respect along with the smile. The accusation of Zosimus
of Arrogance "when he had attained to the sole authority," and that he "gave
himself up to the unrestrained exercise of his power," must be interpreted like
those of other un-Christian witnesses, in the light of the fact that his
actions worked relative hardships to the non-Christians, and that very justice to the
Christians would seem injustice to them, and if Constantine was more than
just, his generosity was at some one's expense. His energy of execution and
constant success, with his dominating idea of a Divine mission, would naturally
engender this faith in his own infallibility; for what is arrogance but this vanity
joined with power? His action toward schismatics--Donatists, Arians, or orthodox
troublers of his peace--was such as to suggest some degree of this vice. Yet
his success in keeping the followers of the old religion fairly mollified, and
his generally successful tact, showed that this was in no sense a dominating and
unrelieved characteristic. Two other weaknesses closely allied with these are
also imputed to Constantine: Jealousy, as illustrated by the statement that
"wishing to minimize the deeds of his predecessors, he took pains to tarnish their
virtues by giving them jocose epithets" (Dion. Cont. 2 [Muller, p. 199]; cf.
Vict. Epit. p. 51), and Suspiciousness (Eutrop. 10. 7); for which latter, a man
who had survived as many plots as he had, might well be excused. Again and
again and again he trusted men, and they deceived him. His conduct with Maximian
shows that at least in the beginning, before he had had so much experience of
untrustworthiness, he was remarkably free from this. A much more serious charge is
that of Faithlessness preferred by Zosimus, who says (2. 28), "in violation of
his oaths (for this was customary with him) "and twice repeats the charge.
Eusebius, on the other hand, tells what great pains Constantine took not to be the
one to break peace with Licinius (V. C.). One is worth as little as the other.
The charge seems to rest mainly or wholly on his conduct towards Licinius, in
beginning war and in putting him to death. A small boy once held a smaller boy
in a firm grip, but agreed to spare him the cuffing he deserved because he was
smaller. The smaller small boy promptly set his teeth in the leg of the larger
small boy, and was properly cuffed for it. Thereupon the smaller small boy's
big brother was filled with indignation, which he manifested by seeking and
finding the same fate. The indignation in behalf of Licinius seems to be in large
measure big brother indignation--indignation with the wrong party. He appears to
have been one of those who held a compact to be binding on the other party
only. It wasn't in the bargain that he should persecute the Christians, or in the
other bargain that he should plot his benefactor's overthrow. That king in
Scripture who took back his promise to forgive a debt of ten thousand talents was
not faithless.
(c) In relations with his family. He was a filial Son, having the
confidence of his father, as shown in his wish of succession, and showing his mother
all honors when he came to power (cf. coins showing her position as empress, and
V.C.). "And well may his character be styled blessed for his filial piety as
well as on other grounds" (V. C. 3. 47).
It is in this relation to his family, however, that the most serious
attacks on the character of Constantine have been made. Eutropius says: "But the
pride of prosperity caused Constantine greatly to depart from his former agreeable
mildness of temper. Falling first upon his own relatives, he put to death his
son, an excellent man; his sister's son, a youth of amiable disposition; soon
afterwards his wife; and subsequently many of his friends." This has been a
battle-ground of accusation or excusation in all the centuries. The testimony is
very meagre and uncertain, but this much may be said: 1. That any jury would
regard the fact of deaths as evidenced. It is witnessed by Eutrop. (10. 6), Zos.,
Vict., Hieron., &c. 2. That he was unjustifiable is not proven. In respect to
the death of Fausta, at least, there was probably just cause; whether love
intrigue or other intrigue, there seems to have been some real occasion. The death of
Crispus, too, was from no mere suspicions, but on apparently definite grounds
of distrust. It is historical assumption to say that he had no good grounds,
whatever these may have been--illicit relationship with Fausta or more probably
political intrigue. At the worst, he was put to death on false but, at the time,
apparently true accusation: what has been done by judges and juries of the
best intention. (1) Of Licinius, his sister's son, it can hardly be said that he
had the same reason, as he was still a boy. But remembering the inherited
character of Licinius, and noticing the curious fact that the cordiality between
Constantia and Constantine was peculiarly great to the end, it seems as if there
must have been some mitigating circumstance. (2) In all historical candor it
looks as if there had been some general intrigue against Constantine which had been
met in this way; but the fairest verdict to enter is "causes unknown."
In estimating the characteristic value of the acts it must be noted, (1).
That it has in no sense the character of private execution. The emperor was
judge. Even if he mistook evidence and put to death an innocent man, it was as
when a judge does the same. 2. That the relative moral character of punishments
inflicted is conditioned by the custom of punishment. An English judge of the
past was not as cruel in hanging a man for theft, as a modern one in applying the
extreme penalty of the law to an offense with mitigating circumstances, would
be. 3. That all law of evidence, all rhyme and reason, says that any man's any
act is to be interpreted in the light of his general character. Where evidence
is lacking or doubtful, such evidence of general character has actual weight,
and may be conclusive. In application to these acts note (a) The peculiar
forbearance which Constantine exercised toward Maximian. (b) The conclusive universal
testimony to the general mildness of his character and his habitual
mercifulness. In view of this, it is to be judged that there was some real, or appearing,
great ground of judicial wrath. 4. That Constantine had suffered from plots on
the part of his own relatives over and over again, and spared, and been plotted
against again, as in the cases of Maximian, Bassianus, and Licinius. 5. That
they were not put to death "in a gust of passion" at once, but in successive
acts. In view of these things it is fair and just to say that they were put to
death on grounds which seemed just and for the welfare of society, and their
deaths in no sense indicate cruelty or unnaturalness on the part of Constantine.
Even the death of Licinius must be interpreted by the political ethics of the
times and its circumstances. So long as sentimentalists continue to send bouquets
to murderers and erect monuments to anarchists, they will regard execution, even
legal execution, as prima facie evidence of cruelty, and the killing of a
murderer in self-defense, or the hanging of a traitor, as crime. Constantine's
whole character ensures that if he thought he could have spared them, or any one,
with safety, he would have done so. (3)
In general he was a faithful husband as respects marital virtue, and a
good father. He took care that his children should be well educated. Crispus was
under Lactantius (Hieron.), and the others perhaps under Arborius ("Auson. de
Prof. Burdig. 16"); at all events, he had the most accomplished teachers of
secular learning to instruct in the art of war, and in political and legal science
(V. C. 4. 51), and both by his own instruction and that of men of approved
piety, took special pains with their religious training. He early appointed them to
offices of authority, and distributed the empire among them.
(d) In relations with friends. His general conduct toward his friends was
marked by very great liberality (cf. above). Eutropius speaks emphatically of
this even while he uses the expression which has been such a puzzle to all, that
"toward some of his friends he was double" (or dangerous), a phrase which is
interpreted by Johannes Ant. as meaning "to some of friends false (unsound,
<greek>upoulwd</greek>) and unsafe (unwholesome, <greek>ouk</greek>
<greek>uUipd</greek>)" (ed. Muller 4. p. 602-3). His uniform effort to please his friends has
been discussed above.
(e) In relations with society. 1. As General he seems to have been popular
with his own soldiers (cf. above), inspiring them with enthusiasm and energy.
Toward hostile soldiers he was merciful (cf. above), not following up an
advantage further than was necessary, and toward conquered enemies unusually
forbearing; e.g. at Sigusium, at Rome, with Maximian, with Licinius, and with the Goths
(cf. above). His generalship is characterized by careful provision for the
guarding of his rear, and by rapidity of movement and dash in actual conflict. 2.
As Legislator he "enacted many laws, some good, but most of them superfluous,
and some severe" (Eutrop. 10. 8). He seems to have had a weakness for law-making
which, at all events, shows a characteristic respect for law little shared by
his early contemporaries. Of course Eutropius would consider all laws in favor
of Christians superfluous. Laws for the abolition of idolatrous practices, for
the erection of Christian houses of worship, observance of the Lord's Day (V.
C. 4. 23), permitting cases to be tried before bishops (Soz. 1. 9; Euseb. H. E.
10. 7; Cod. Theod. Tit. de episc. &c., would surely seem so. But even in other
laws Constantine seems to have had at times an abnormal zeal for law-making,
when his energies were not occupied in war or church-building. The laws were
generally wise and, at the least, benevolently or righteously meant. Such were the
abolition of crucifixion (Vict. Caes.) and of gladiatorial shows ( V. C. 4. 25;
Socr. 1. 8; C. Theod. 15. 12. 1), the law that the families of slaves were not
to be separated (C. Theod. 2.25), that forbidding the scourging of debtors (C.
Theod. 7.3), and that repressing calumny (Vict. Epit. 51). Among the "severe"
laws were such as punished certain forms of illicit intercourse with death.
3. As Statesman his policy was broad and far-reaching. He fully organized
and carefully established one section of his territory before he enlarged. He
changed the whole constitution of the empire, both civil and military (cf.
Wordsworth, in Smith & W.). He inaugurated reforms in finance, and especially was
most assiduous in the matter of internal improvements, restoring and building
from one end of the empire to the other. The great characteristic consummation of
his reign was the union of Church and State, over which men are still divided
as to whether it was a tremendous blessing or a tremendous curse. Tremendous it
surely was in its shaping power on world history. (Compare numerous titles
under Literature.) The general statement of Eutropius that "in the beginning of his
reign he might have been compared to the best princes, in the latter part only
to those of a middling character," must be interpreted by the fact that during
the latter part of his reign he was so associated with Christianity, in itself
a falling away in the eyes of the old religionists. His reign was one of order
and justice such as few were, and an order out of chaos, a reign in which it
could be peculiarly said that "chastity was safe and marriage protected" (Naz.
c. 38), where a man's life and property were secure as under few of the Roman
emperors. It is idle to refuse the title of Great to a man who, from the
beginning, followed a consistent, though developing policy, organized the interior, and
securely guarded the frontier of his empire at each enlargement, and finally
unified the whole on such a basis as to secure large internal prosperity and
development.
- 6. Religious Characteristics.
Was Constantine a Christian? This vain question has to be considered,
hardly discussed. The interminable opinions, one way or the other, are for the most
part wise-seeming, meaningless generalizations. Like any generalized
statement, it is conditioned by the point of view of the author. When ten men answered
the question "What is a Christian?" in ten different ways, who shall say what
any one is? This has been the difficulty. One does not conceive of Christianity
apart from baptismal regeneration. The question has then narrowed to one of
baptism. Constantine was not a Christian until just before his death. Another has
some other test. Another is not a Christian himself, and so on. A good Biblical,
Protestant starting-point is to say he was a Christian as soon as he believed
in Christ, and that the evidence of faith is in confession and action. Already,
before his campaign into Italy, he seems to have been in intimate contact with
the Christians. Hosius was probably already one of his advisers. The young
emperor had inherited his father's piety (Paneg. 307, c. 5), and was inclined to
monotheism. The words of advisers must have made him think at least, and he
seems to have made a sort of test of believing at the time of the famous "vision of
the cross," whatever that may have been. Judging from the way men think and
feel their way to faith, it seems psychologically probable that, feeling his way
along to that point, he tried faith and, having success, he substantially
believed from that time on. Certainly from a very early period after this, the
evidences begin to be clear and increasingly so as presumably his faith itself
became more clear and fixed. The account in Eusebius of the process of thought by
which he inclined toward Christianity has the greatest plausibility. He says that
"considering the matter of Divine assistance, it occurred to him that those
who had relied on idols had been deceived and destroyed, while his father . . .
had honored the one Supreme God, had found him Saviour, &c . . . . he judged it
folly to join in the idle worship of those who were no gods . . . and felt it
incumbent on him to honor no other than the God of his father." The nature of
the vision of the cross, whether a miracle, a natural phenomenon, or only a
dream, does not affect the probability of the account by Eusebius of what followed
it (V. C. 1. 32). "At the time above specified, being struck with amazement at
the extraordinary vision, and resolving to worship no other God save him who had
appeared to him, he sent for those who were acquainted with the mysteries of
his doctrines, and inquired also what God was. . . . They affirmed that he was
God, the only begotten Son of the one and only God," and he thereupon "made the
priests of God his counsellors and deemed it incumbent on him to honor the God
who had appeared to him, with all devotion." According to Sozomen, "it is
universally admitted Constantine embraced the religion of the Christians previous to
his war with Maxentius and prior to his return to Rome and Italy; and this is
evidenced by the dates of the laws which he enacted in favor of religion" (Soz.
1. 5; cf. 1. 3). Philostorgius (1. 6), "in conformity with all other writers,"
ascribes to the victory over Maxentius (Photius. Epit.). This is confirmed,
too, by the remark of the Panegyrist (313, c. 4; cf. c. 2 and c. 11), that he
conducted the war by Divine instruction, and the famous inscription on the
triumphal arch, "instinctu Divinitatis." According to Augustine he was at the time of
the petition of the Donatists, "mindful of the hope which he maintained in
Christ" (August. contra litt. Petil. Bk. II. c. 92, p. 205).
The tales of his baptism at this time, or by Sylvester at all, are pure
fables (cf. under The Mythical Constantine), but it appears from antecedent
probability, from testimony, and from his early subsequent identification with the
Christians that he became fairly convinced at this time. His letters concerning
the council at Aries, to be sure, have little direct evidence, but enough to
show that he regarded the Christian religion as the worship of that one supreme
God, and in them Hosius was already his trusted adviser. But in his letters to
Chrestus (314) he speaks of those who are "forgetful of their own salvation and
the reverence due to the most holy faith," and if his letter to the bishops
after the council at Aries--a letter full of expressions like "Christ the
Saviour," "brethren beloved," "I who myself await the judgment of Christ," "our
Saviour"1--be genuine, Constantine was well advanced in his commitment in 314; but
whether it is or not, the fact of his Christian advisers, of his laws in behalf of
Christians, and various substantial favors to them, his recognition of their
God as his one God, makes it almost idle to discuss the question. Was
Constantine a Christian in 314? What is a Christian? He seems to have been. The type was
that of many a business-man church-member of to-day--Christians, but neither
over-well-instructed, nor dangerously zealous in the exercise of his faith. It
must be remembered that during these earlier years his confession of his faith
and identification of himself with the Christians was conditioned by his relation
to the old religion. Such a change was a radical novelty. His position was not
yet secure. He had to use his utmost tact to keep all elements in hand. He was
conditioned just as a modern Christian emperor or president, a majority of
whose political advisers and subjects or electors are non-religious. He had great
problems of political organization to effect, and was immersed in these. The
only matter of surprise is that he grew so rapidly. There is no ground whatever
for supposing that he dissembled to the end, or even at all. To say that his
retaining the title of pontifex maximus, or making concessions respecting the old
worship, or allowing soothsayers to be consulted, or even the postponement of
his baptism, indicate this, is critical absurdity in the face of evidence. (1)
Testimony, both heathen and Christian, to the openness of his action is
complete, and the testimony of his acts--such, e.g., as the law for the observance of
Sunday--conclusive. Later, at least, he "most openly destroyed temple worship
and built Christian houses of worship" (Eunap. Vita [?]des. 37, ed. Boiss. p.
20). From the defeat of Licinius on, edicts, letters, speeches, acts of all sorts,
testify to a most unequivocal adoption of the Christian religion. Eusebius
hardly overstates in saying that "he maintained a continual testimony to his
Christianity, with all boldness and before all men, and so far was he from shrinking
from an open profession of the Christian name, that he rather desired to make
it manifest to all that he regarded this as his highest honor" (V. C. 3. 2).
Really the question whether he considered himself, or was considered, a Christian
at and after the time of the Council of Nicaea is too idle even to mention, if
it had not been gravely discussed. In the opinion of the bishops there he was
"most pious" and "dear to God" (E.P. synod. in Socr. 1. 9; Theodoret, 1. 8). On
his part, letters are full of pious expression and usually begin or end or
both with "beloved brethren." To the council itself he describes himself as
"fellow-servant" of "Him who is our common Lord and Saviour." Another more
considerable position is that all that indisputable external connection with Christianity
was pure political expediency, that he was a shrewd politician who saw which
way the wind was blowing, and had skill to take advantage of it. That
Constantine was not a Christian in the strict sense even to the end of his life was the
position of Keim. Burckhardt regards him as a pure politician, without a touch
of Christian life. Brieger (1880) says we have not grounds to decide either way,
whether he was "a godless egoistic fatalist or had a more or less warm
religious or even Christian interest," but that the fixed fact is, that it was not
because of his inner belief in the Christian religion that he showed favor to the
Christians. In a brief attempt to get some basis in the sources, the
enthusiastic testimony of Eusebius and other writers, explicit as it is, may be quite
disregarded, even the testimony to facts, such as his practice of giving thanks
(V. C. 1. 39), of invoking Divine aid (Euseb. V. C. 2, 4, 6, 13; Soz. 2. 34), of
his erecting a place of prayer in his palace (Soz. 1. 8), of his fasting (K C.
2.41), of his having a stated hour of prayer (V. C. 4. 22), although all these
are interesting. The documents, however, unless by supremely uncritical
rejection, can be regarded as fundamental sources. A brief analysis of these, even
though imperfect, will furnish grounds on the basis of which those who apply
various tests may apply them. Starting from his faith in Christ, surely the center
of Christianity, he believed Christ to be Son of God, "God and the Son of God
the author of every blessing" (S.C.), the revealer of the Father, who has
"revealed a pure light in the person of Thy Son . . . and hast thus given testimony
concerning Thyself" (S.C. 1), proceeding from the Father (S.C.), and incarnate,
his incarnation having been predicted also by the prophets. He believed this Son
of God to be his Saviour (Ad Tyr., Ad Ant., Ad Euseb., &c.) "our common Lord
and Saviour" (Ad Euseb.), "our Saviour, our hope, and our life" (Ad eccl. Al.).
He believed in his miraculous birth (S.C.) and in his death for our deliverance
(Ad Nic.; cf. Ad Mac. &c.), "the path which leads to everlasting life" (S.C.
1), "a precious and toilsome" work (Ad Euseb.), and in his ascension into heaven
(S.C. 1). He believed in "God the Father" (Ad Euseb. 2), "Almighty" (Ad
Euseb.), Lord of all (Ad Euseb. 2), and the Holy Ghost (Ad eccl. Al.; cf. S. C.). He
believed in "Divine Providence" (Ad Eccl. Al.; Ad Alex. Ar.; Ad. Euseb. 1),
God the preserver of all men (Ad Alex. et Ar.), who sees all things (Ad Syn.
Nic.), who is near us and the observer of all our actions (S. C.), and "under the
guidance of whose Almighty hand" he is (Ad Prov. Pal.), that all things are
regulated by the determination of his will (Ad Euseb.). He believed in the
existence of a personal devil (Ad Eccl. Al.). He believed in the future life (Ad Prov.
Pal.), "the only true life" (S.C. 12), the "strife for immortality" (Ad
Euseb.), to which those may aspire who know Him (S. C. 12). He believed in future
rewards and punishments (Ad Pray. Pal.; S. C. 23). He believed in the inspiration
of the Scriptures (Ad Eccl. Al.). He loved God (Ad Euseb. 2; V. C. 2.55), and
considered it his chief work in life to glorify Christ (S. C.). He loved his
fellow-men, being disposed "to love you with an enduring affection" (Ad Ant.; V. C.
3.60, &c.), and recognized it as virtue in others (8, c. 11). To him, God, in
general, is the source of all blessings (Ad Pray. Pal.; S.C., &c.). "I am most
certainly persuaded," he says, "that I myself owe my life, my every breath, in
short, my very inmost and secret thoughts to the favor of the Supreme God" (Ad
Pray. Pal.). He recognizes contrition as a requisite for pardon (Ad. Pray.
Pal), and that it is the power of God which removes guilt (Ad Euseb.). In the
conduct of life. "Our Saviour's words and precepts are a model, as it were, of what
our life should be" (Ad. Ant.; V. C. 3. 60).
Expositions of his doctrinal and ethical positions might be multiplied
almost without end from the many and fruitful sources, but a few specimens in his
own expression will best show the spirit of his religious life. A most
suggestive and beautiful sketch of Christ's ministry on earth too long to quote here
may be found in his Oration (ch. 15), but the following selections will give the
idea:
A description of the inner Christian life. "For the only power in man
which can be elevated to a comparison with that of God is sincere and guiltless
service and devotion of heart to Himself, with the contemplation and study of
whatever pleases Him, the raising our affections above the things of earth, and
directing our thoughts, as far as we may, to high and heavenly objects" (S.C. 14).
A description of the outer Christian life. "Compare our religion with
your own. Is there not with us genuine concord, and unwearied love of others? If
we reprove a fault, is not our object to admonish, not to destroy; our
correction for safety, not for cruelty? Do we not exercise not only sincere faith
toward God, but fidelity in the relations of social life? Do we not pity the
unfortunate? Is not ours a life of simplicity which disdains to cover evil beneath
the mask of fraud and hypocrisy?" (S.C. 23).
A prayer. "Not without cause, O holy God, do I prefer this prayer to Thee,
the Lord of all. Under Thy guidance have I devised and accomplished measures
fraught with blessing: preceded by Thy sacred sign, I have led Thy armies to
victory: and still on each occasion of public danger, I follow the same symbol of
Thy perfections while advancing to meet the foe. Therefore have I dedicated to
Thy service a soul duly attempered by love and fear. For Thy name I truly love,
while I regard with reverence that power of which Thou hast given abundant
proofs, to the confirmation and increase of my faith" (Ad prov. Or.).
A confession of faith in God and in Christ. "This God I confess that I
hold in unceasing honor and remembrance; this God I delight to contemplate with
pure and guileless thoughts in the height of his glory." "His pleasure is in
works of moderation and gentleness. He loves the meek and hates the turbulent
spirit, delighting in faith. He chastises unbelief" (Ad Sap.). "He is the supreme
judge of all things, the prince of immortality, the giver of everlasting life"
(S.C. 36).
Was Constantine a Christian? Let each one apply his own test.
- 7. General Characterization.
Before trying to gather into continuous statement the traits of character
which have been examined, a few general characterizations must be mentioned at
least. Beginning at the bottom, the unfriendly, or hostile, or at the least
unsympathetic, heathen testimonies generalize him as at least relatively and on
the whole both great and good. The general tendency of heathen testimony is to
represent him as admirable in the early part of his reign, but execrable, or less
admirable, in the latter part; that of Christian writers is to represent a
growth of excellence, which raises him to saintship at the end. This is most
natural. Favoring Christianity was itself a moral fall to a heathen, and bestowing
money on Christians would be robbery. The turning of his character was with his
changing face towards Christianity, and culminated in the overthrow of
Licinius. Licinius fought really as the champion of heathenism. The adherents of a lost
cause are characterizing their victor. It is like an ex-Confederate
characterizing Lincoln or Grant. The point of view is different. Honest and true men in
the South thought Lincoln a curse, and often in popular verdict his character
was "black." The popular proverb quoted by Victor (Epit. p. 51), "Bull-necked for
ten years, for twelve a freebooter, and for ten a spendthrift (immature
child)," has just the value of a Southern popular opinion of Lincoln, or a rural
Northerner's of "Jeff Davis." Indeed, the first might summarize at times the
Southern popular verdict of Grant; the second, a frequently expressed estimate of
Lincoln's conduct in the emancipation of slaves; and the third, their view of the
enormous expenditure for pensions of Union soldiers, even as it was fifteen
years ago. But even the rather severe Victor, who reports this proverb, finds
Constantine "most excellent (commodissimus) in many respects,"--in respect of
certain laws, in his patronage of the arts, especially that of letters, as scholar,
as author, in the hearing of delegations and complaints (p. 51). Again,
"Praxagoras, though a heathen, says that in all sorts of virtue and personal
excellence and good fortune, Constantine outshone all the emperors who preceded him"
(Photius, Cad. 62, ed. Muller, p. 1). And finally, the heathen Eutropius, who
characterizes from his standpoint so admirably, (1) though he naturally finds that
"in the beginning of his reign he might have been compared to the best princes;
in the latter part, only to those of middling character," nevertheless records
"that innumerable good qualities of mind and body were present in him," and
that he was "deservedly enrolled among the gods,"-using the recruit which he uses
also of Aurelian, but not generally, and not even of Constantius. On purely
heathen testimony, therefore, Constantine, taken by and large, was comparatively
remarkable and admirable. A moderate Christian characterization is that of
Theophanes (p. 29): "Pre-eminent for masculine strength of character, penetration
of mind, well-disciplined power of thought; for unbending righteousness, ready
benevolence, thorough majestic beauty of countenance, mighty and successful in
war, great in wars with the barbarians, invincible in domestic wars, and so firm
and unshaken in faith that through prayer he obtained the victory in all his
battles." Remembering, therefore, that in order to understand a character in
past centuries one must project himself into his time; remembering again the
circumstances of his time and its practice, we shall, without forgetting any of the
acts on which he has been judged, find him on indisputable testimony superior
to most of the other emperors in character, and as much above the circumstances
of his times as would characterize a man of to-day as of peculiarly high moral
character. In view of this, it is uncritical, and a violence to historical
evidence, to approach one whom, at death, the heathen thought worthy to be enrolled
among the gods, and the Christians canonized as saint (in the Greek calendar),
as other than one who, taken all in all, was of unusual excellence of
character. As in any synthesis, any organization, subordinate facts must be viewed in
their relation to their center and whole, as by any law of criminal procedure
acts must be judged in the light of general character, so any rational, legal,
scientific, historical estimate of Constantine must be in view of this fact.
With this as center of perspective, we have a picture of Constantine with
lights and shadows, to be sure, but in the main true in its drawing and
coloring. He was a man of rather more than medium height, strongly built, with broad
shoulders, thick neck, and generally athletic and well-formed figure. His
piercing eye, slightly aquiline nose, scanty reddish beard, and florid complexion,
together with his bright expression, made a countenance striking and even
handsome. Of great physical strength and vigor, he carried himself in a manly,
self-possessed, dignified, and serene manner, uniting a dignity which might rise at
times even to hauteur, or even incipient arrogance, with a general and customary
affability. His dress, like his complexion, was somewhat florid. His mind was
active, alert, intense without being somber, penetrating, sound, fairly
cultivated, and well exercised in expression by pen or word. He was animated, habile,
and attentive in conversation, self-possessed, steady, and calm in formal
address. He was pre-eminently a man of energy, intense and resistless, with a
determination to accomplish whatever he attempted, which rose under opposition to
irresistible impetuosity, and wrought a courage which, in action, was absolutely
fearless. His ambition was limitless, but not wholly or even mainly selfish.
With his energy and ambition were united the ballast of marked prudence,
patience, perseverance, faithfulness to details, steadfastness, and supreme
self-control. He was amiable and tactful, popular with his soldiers, and careful to
please. Toward those who came into his power he showed habitual mildness and
forbearance, -- a mildness so great that he was generally blamed for it; and
toward all he showed great kindness, justice, and a generosity which verged on the
lavish. He was open to the charge of over-generosity, almost of prodigality, a
good measure of real vanity, some over-insistence on his own will and thought
as the final standard of right, and by no means free from mistakes or human
weaknesses. He was a good son, husband, father, a remarkably successful general, a
tolerable legislator, and a clear-sighted, firm-willed statesman. In his
religious life he abounded in creed and confession- believing in the Trinity, the
Divinity of Christ, the Atonement, the Resurrection, and Eternal Life, in
Repentance and Faith, in love to God, and love to man. He preached his faith on all
occasions; he practiced thanksgiving and prayer abundantly. He regarded
everything that he had or was as from God. The editor's brief judgment is that
Constantine, for his time, made an astonishingly temperate, wise, and, on the whole,
benevolent use of absolute power, and in morality, kindly qualities, and, at last,
in real Christian character, greatly surpassed most nineteenth century
politicians-- standing to modern statesmen as Athanasius to modern theologians.