The Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian, in addition…
532 CE to 543 CE
The Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian, in addition to the long war he prosecutes against the Ostrogoths for control of Italy, wars repeatedly with the Sassanian Persians, but these eastern conflicts usually end with the Romans buying peace.
Justinian extorts heavy taxes from his subjects to finance his wars.
Following the suppression of the Nika riot in Constantinople, Justinian immediately begins the erection of a grand and beautiful cathedral, which will become known as the Church of Hagia Sophia (“Blessed Wisdom”).
The kings of Western Europe continue to pay deference to the emperors and mint coinage with their portraits.
In North Africa, the Vandal kings portray themselves as fully independent rulers.
In addition, the Vandals—like most Germanics, adherents of Arianism—have persecuted the Chalcedonian majority of the local population, though peace between Constantinople and Carthage has held for sixty years.
Justinian's decision to go to war with the Vandals causes great consternation among the capital's elites, in whose minds the disaster of 468 is still fresh.
The financial officials resent the expenditure involved, while the military is weary from the Persian war and fears the Vandals' sea-power.
The emperor's scheme receives support mostly from the Church, reinforced by the arrival of victims of renewed persecutions from Africa.
Following the complete victory of Belisarius, Justinian’s general, he holds a triumph—the first to be celebrated in Constantinople since its foundation and the first granted to a private citizen in over five and a half centuries.
Among the treasures he has brought with him are the menorah and other Temple vessels taken from Rome in the Vandal sack of 455.
Justinian completes his codification of Roman law in 534, the third of three committees having produces a textbook, the “Institutes,” for beginning students.
The Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law), also known as the Justinian Code, recognizes many types of wills, including oral wills declared in the presence of seven witnesses or before a public official.
Justinian has expanded the "limitations on Jews” that will serve as the basis for future European codes.
His Lex Julia, which declares that a wife has no right to bring criminal charges of adultery against a husband, makes divorce almost impossible in the Empire.
Following the murder of Amalasuntha, daughter of Theodoric the Great and queen of the Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy, Justinian, seeing an opportunity to support his fellow Chalcedonians and to reassert direct control over the West, dispatches an expeditionary force to begin the reconquest of Italy and sends Belisarius with a fleet to attack Sicily, while an embassy sets off to gain the support of the powerful Franks now settled in Gaul.
Justinian issues an edict in 537 depriving his Jewish subjects of civil equality and religious freedom.
The Codex Justinianeus (Corpus Juris Civilis) unites church and state, effectively making a non-citizen of anyone not connected to the Christian church.
Alarmed by renewed barbarian incursions across the Danube frontier from the Slavs, the Bulgars, the Gepids, and the Avars, and fully occupied in Italy, Justinian has somewhat neglected the army in the East.
The renewed war in the East, which drags on under other generals, is to some extent hindered by the bubonic plague of 541-543.
The Plague of Justinian, which marks the beginning of a two hundred-year long pandemic, will go on to destroy up to a quarter of the human population of the eastern Mediterranean, ultimately killing an estimated one hundred million people in Asia, Europe and northern Africa.