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Table of Contents
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Diocletian
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Clovis the First
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Belisarius
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Charles Martel
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Pepin the Short
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Charlemagne
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Olaf Tryggvesson
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William the Conqueror
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Godfrey de Bouillon
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Saladin
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Edward I of England
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Edward III of England
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Edward the Black Prince
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Bertrand du Guesclin
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Henry V of England
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John Huniades
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Warwick the Kingmaker
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Hernando Cortez
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Francisco Pizarro
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Gaspard de Coligni
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Henry IV of France
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Sir Francis Drake
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Sir Walter Raleigh
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Miles Standish
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Albrecht von Wallenstein
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Gustavus Adolphus
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Marshal Turenne
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Charles XII of Sweden
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John, Duke of Marlborough
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Prince Eugene of Savoy
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General James Wolfe
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Frederick the Great
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Lord Robert Clive
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Francois Kellerman
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Michel Nev
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Napoleon Bonaparte
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Arthur, Duke of Wellington
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Lord Horation Nelson
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Israel Putnam
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Anthony Wayne
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Francis Marion
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John Paul Jones
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Tecumseh
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James Lawrence
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Stephen Decatur
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Oliver Hazard Perry
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Sam Houston
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Winfield Scott
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Ulysses Simpson Grant
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William Tecumseh Sherman
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Philip Henry Sheridan
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Robert Edmund Lee
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Letter from Lee to his Son
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Thomas Jonathan Jackson
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David Glascoe Farragut
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David Dixon Porter
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Giuseppe Garibaldi
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Count Von Moltke
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George Dewey
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DIOCLETIAN
(245-313)
[50]
AIUS VALERIUS DIOCLETIANUS, one of the most famous of the
Roman emperors, was, as De Quincey says, "doubtless
that man of iron whom the times demanded." He was born
at Dioclea, in Dalmatia, some say at Salona, about A.
D. 245 according to some, but others make him ten years
older. His original name was Diocles, which he
afterward changed into Diocletianus. He is said by some
to have been the son of a notary, by others the
freedman of a senator named Anulinus. He entered the
army at an early age, and rose gradually to rank; he
served in Gaul, in Mœsia, under Probus, and was present
at the campaign against the Persians, in which Carus,
then emperor, perished in a mysterious manner.
Diocletian commanded the household or imperial
body-guards when young Numerianus, the son of Carus,
was secretly put to death by Aper his father-in-law,
while travelling in a close litter on account of
illness, on the return of the army from Persia. The
death of Numerianus being discovered after several days
by the soldiers near Calchedon, they arrested Aper and
proclaimed Diocletian emperor, who addressing the
soldiers from his tribunal in the camp, protested his
innocence of the death of Numerianus, and then
upbraiding Aper for the crime, plunged his sword into
the traitor's body.
The new emperor observed to a friend that "he had now
killed the boar," punning on the word Aper, Which means
a boar, and alluding to the prediction of a soothsayer
in Gaul, who had told him that he would become emperor
after having killed a boar (Vopiscus, in "Hist. Aug.").
Diocletian, self-composed and strong-minded in other
respects, was all his life an anxious believer in
divination, which superstition led him probably to
inflict summary punishment upon Aper with his own
hands. He made his solemn entrance into Nicomedia in
September, 284, which town he afterward chose for his
favorite residence.
Carinus, the other son of Carus, who had remained in
Italy, having collected a force to attack Diocletian,
the two armies met at Margum, in Mœsia, where the
soldiers of Carinus had the advantage at first, but
Carinus himself being killed during the battle by his
officers, who detested him for his cruelty and
de- [51] bauchery, both armies joined in acknowledging
Diocletian emperor in 285. Diocletian was generous
after his victory, and, contrary to the common
practice, there were no executions, proscriptions, or
confiscations of property; he even retained most of the
officers of Carinus in their places.
Diocletian, on assuming the imperial power, found the
Empire assailed by enemies in various quarters—on the
Persian frontiers, on the side of Germany and of
Illyricum, and in Britain; besides which a serious
revolt had broken out in Gaul among the rural
population, under two leaders who had assumed the title
of emperor. To quell the disturbance in Gaul,
Diocletian sent his old friend Maximianus, a native of
Pannonia, and a brave but rude uncultivated soldier.
Maximianus defeated the Bagaudi, for such was the name
the rustic insurgents had assumed. In the year 286,
Diocletian chose Maximianus as his colleague in the
Empire, under the name of Marcus Valerius Maximianus
Augustus, and it is to the credit of both that the
latter continued ever after faithful to Diocletian and
willing to follow his advice. Maximianus was stationed
in Gaul and on the German frontier to repel invasion;
Diocletian resided chiefly in the East to watch the
Persians, though he appears to have visited Rome in the
early part of his reign. About 287 the revolt of
Carausius took place. In the following year Maximianus
defeated the Germans near Treviri, and Diocletian
himself marched against other tribes on the Rhetian
frontier; the year after he defeated the Sarmatians on
the lower Danube. In the same year, 289, peace was made
between Carausius and the two emperors, Carausius being
allowed to retain possession of Britain. In 290
Maximianus and Diocletian met at Milan to confer
together on the state of the Empire, after which
Diocletian returned to Nicomedia. The Persians soon
after again invaded Mesopotamia and threatened Syria;
the Quinquegentiani, a federation of tribes in the
Mauritania Cæsariensis, revolted; another revolt under
one Achillæus broke out in Egypt; another in Italy
under a certain Julianus.
Diocletian thought it necessary to increase the number
of his colleagues in order to face the attacks in the
various quarters. On the 1st of March, 292, or 291,
according to some chronologists, he appointed Galerius
as Cæsar, and presented him to the troops at Nicomedia.
At the same time Maximianus adopted on his part
Constantius called Chlorus. The two Cæsars repudiated
their respective wives; Galerius married Valeria,
Diocletian's daughter, adding to his name that of
Valerianus; and Constantius married Theodora, daughter
of Maximianus. Galerius was a native of Dacia, and a
good soldier, but violent and cruel; he had been a
herdsman in his youth, for which he has been styled, in
derision, Armentarius. The two Cæsars remained
subordinate to the two Augusti, though each of the four
was entrusted with the administration of a part of the
Empire. Diocletian kept to himself Asia and Egypt;
Maximianus had Italy and Africa; Galerius, Thrace and
Illyricum; and Constantius had Gaul and Spain. But it
was rather an administrative than a political division.
At the head of the edicts of each prince were put the
names of all the four, beginning with that of
Diocletian.
[52] Diocletian resorted to this arrangement probably as
much for reasons of internal as of external policy. For
nearly a hundred years before, ever since the death of
Commodus, the soldiers had been in the habit of giving
or selling the imperial crown, to which any general
might aspire. Between thirty and forty emperors had
been thus successively made and unmade, many of whom
only reigned a few months. By fixing upon four
colleagues, one in each of the great divisions of the
Empire, each having his army, and all mutually checking
one another, Diocletian put a stop to military
insolence and anarchy. The Empire was no longer put up
to sale, the immediate and intolerable evil was
effectually cured, though another danger remained, that
of disputes and wars between the various sharers of the
imperial power; still it was a smaller danger and one
which did not manifest itself so long as Diocletian
remained at the helm. Writers have been very free of
their censure upon this emperor for parcelling, as they
call it, the Empire; but this was the only chance there
was of preventing its crumbling to pieces. Italy, and
Rome in particular, lost by the change: they no longer
monopolized the wealth and power of the world, but the
other provinces gained. The Empire was much too large
for one single man or a single central administration,
under the dwindled influence of the Roman name, and
amidst the numerous causes of local dissension and
discontent, private ambition, social corruption, and
foreign hostility, that had accumulated for three
centuries, since the time of Augustus.
The new Cæsars justified Diocletian's expectations.
Constantius defeated the Franks and the Alemanni, and
soon after reconquered Britain. Galerius subjugated the
Carpi, and transported the whole tribe into Pannonia.
In the year 296, the Persians, under their king Narses,
again invaded Mesopotamia and part of Syria. Galerius
marched against them, but being too confident was
defeated by superior numbers, and obliged to retire.
On his meeting Diocletian, the emperor showed his
dissatisfaction by letting Galerius walk for a mile,
clad in purple as he was, by the side of his car. The
following year Galerius again attacked the Persians,
and completely defeated them, taking an immense booty.
The wives and children of Narses, who were among the
prisoners, were treated by Galerius with humanity and
respect. Narses sued for peace, which was granted by
Diocletian on condition of the Persians giving up all
the territory on the right or western bank of the
Tigris. This peace was concluded in 297, and lasted
forty years.
At the same time Diocletian marched into Egypt against
Achillæus, whom he besieged in Alexandria, which he
took after a siege of eight months, when the
[53] usurper and his chief adherents were put to death.
Diocletian is said to have behaved on this occasion
with unusual sternness. Several towns of Egypt, among
others Busiris and Coptos, were destroyed. Constantine,
the son of Constantius, who was educated at Nicomedia,
accompanied the emperor in this expedition. Diocletian
fixed the limits of the Empire on that side at the
island of Elephantina, where he built a castle, and
made peace with the neighboring tribes, called by some
Nubæ and by others Nabatæ, to whom he gave up the strip
of territory which the Romans had conquered, of seven
days' march above the first cataract, on condition that
they should prevent the Blemmyes and Ethiopians from
attacking Egypt. Maximianus in the meantime was
engaged in putting down the revolt in Mauritania, which
he effected with full success.
For several years after this the empire enjoyed peace,
and Diocletian and his colleagues were chiefly employed
in framing laws and administrative regulations, and in
constructing forts on the frontiers. Diocletian kept a
splendid court at Nicomedia, which town he embellished
with numerous structures. He, or rather Maximianus by
his order, caused the magnificent Thermæ at Rome to be
built, the remains of which still bear Diocletian's
name, and which contained, besides the baths, a
library, a museum, public walks, and other
establishments.
In February, 303, Diocletian issued an edict against
the Christians, ordering their churches to be pulled
down, their sacred books to be burnt, and all
Christians to be dismissed from offices civil or
military, with other penalties, exclusive however of
death. Various causes have been assigned for this
measure. It is known that Galerius had always been
hostile to the Christians, while Diocletian had openly
favored them, had employed them in his armies and about
his person; and Eusebius speaks of the prosperity,
security, and protection which the Christians enjoyed
under his reign. They had churches in most towns, and
one at Nicomedia in particular under the eye of the
emperor. Just before the edict was issued, Galerius had
repaired to Nicomedia to induce Diocletian to proscribe
the Christians. He filled the emperor's mind with
reports of conspiracies and seditions. The imperial
palace took fire, Constantine ("Oratio ad Cœtum
Sanctorum ") says, from lightning, and Galerius
suggested to the emperor that it was a Christian plot.
The heathen priests on their part exerted themselves
for the same purpose. It happened that on the occasion
of a solemn sacrifice in presence of the emperor, while
priests were consulting the entrails of the victims,
the Christian officers in the imperial retinue crossed
themselves; upon which the priests declared that the
presence of profane men prevented them from discovering
the auspices. Diocletian, who was very anxious to pry
into futurity, became irritated, and ordered all his
Christian officers to sacrifice to the gods under pain
of flagellation and dismissal, which many of them
underwent. Several oracles which he consulted gave
answers unfavorable to the Christians. The church of
Nicomedia was the first pulled down by order of the
emperor. The rashness of a Christian who publicly tore
down the imperial edict exasperated Diocletian still
more: the culprit was put to a cruel death. Then came
a second edict, ordering all magistrates to arrest
[54] the Christian bishops and presbyters, and compel them
to sacrifice to the gods. This was giving to their
enemies power over their lives, and it proved, in fact,
the beginning of a cruel persecution, whose ravages
were the more extensive in proportion to the great
diffusion of Christianity during a long period of
toleration. This was the last persecution under the
Roman Empire, and it has been called by the name of
Diocletian. But that emperor issued the two edicts
reluctantly and after long hesitation, according to
Lactantius's acknowledgment: he fell ill a few months
after, and on recovering from his long illness he
abdicated. Galerius, who had instigated the
persecution, was the most zealous minister of it; the
persecution raged with most fury in the provinces
subject to his rule, and he continued it for several
years after Diocletian's abdication, so that it might
with more propriety be called the Galerian
persecution. Legend says that he died of a horrible
disease, filled with remorse and imagining himself
haunted by the martyred spirits. The countries under
the government of Constantius suffered the least from
it.
In November of that year (303) Diocletian repaired to
Rome, where he and Maximianus enjoyed the honor of a
triumph, followed by festive games. This was the last
triumph that Rome saw. The populace of that city
complained of the economy of Diocletian on the
occasion, who replied that moderation and temperance
were most required when the censor was present. They
vented their displeasure in jibes and sarcasms, which
so hurt Diocletian that he left Rome abruptly in the
month of December for Ravenna, in very cold weather. In
this journey he was seized by an illness which affected
him the whole of the following year, which he spent at
Nicomedia. At one time he was reported to be dead. He
rallied, however, in the spring of 305, and showed
himself in public, but greatly altered in appearance.
Galerius soon after came to Nicomedia, and it is said
that he persuaded Diocletian to abdicate. Others say
that Diocletian did it spontaneously.
On the 1st of May he repaired with his guards to a spot
three miles out of Nicomedia, where he had thirteen
years before proclaimed Galerius as Cæsar, and there
addressing his officers and court, he said that the
infirmities of age warned him to retire from power, and
to deliver the administration of the state into
stronger hands. He then proclaimed Galerius as
Augustus, and Maximinus Daza as the new Cæsar.
Constantine, who has given an account of the ceremony,
which is quoted by Eusebius in his life of that prince,
was present, and the troops fully expected that he
would be the new Cæsar; when they heard another
mentioned, they asked each other whether Constantine
had changed his name. But Galerius did not leave them
long in suspense; he pushed forward Maximinus and
showed him to the assembly, and Diocletian clothed him
with the purple vest, after which the old emperor
returned privately in his carriage to Nicomedia, and
immediately after set off for Salona in Dalmatia, near
which he built himself an extensive palace by the
sea-shore, in which he lived for the rest of his life,
respected by the other emperors, without cares and
without regret.
Part of the external walls which inclosed the area
belonging to his palace
[55] and other buildings still remain, with three of the
gates, as well as a temple, which is now a church at
Spalatro, or Spalato, in Dalmatia, a comparatively
modern town, grown out of the decay of the ancient
Salona, and built in great part within the walls of
Diocletian's residence, from the name of which, "
Palatium," it is believed that "Spalato " is derived.
At the same time that Diocletian abdicated at
Nicomedia, Maximianus, according to an agreement
between them, performed a similar ceremony at Milan,
proclaiming Constantius as Augustus, and Severus as
Cæsar. Both Severus and Maximinus Daza were inferior
persons, and creatures of Galerius, who insisted upon
their nomination in preference to that of Maxentius and
Constantine, whom Diocletian had at first proposed.
Maximianus retired to his seat in Lucania, but not
being endowed with the firmness of Diocletian he tried
some time after to recover his former power, and wrote
to his old colleague to induce him to do the same.
"Were you but to come to Salona," answered Diocletian,
"and see the vegetables which I grow in my garden with
my own hands, you would no longer talk to me of
empire." In his retirement he used to observe to his
associates how difficult it is, even for the
best-intentioned man, to govern well, as he cannot see
everything with his own eyes, but must trust to others,
who often deceive him.
Once only he left his retirement to meet Galerius in
Pannonia for the purpose of appointing a new Cæsar,
Licinius, in the place of Severus, who had died.
Licinius, however, did not prove grateful, for after
the death of Galerius, in 311, he ill-treated his
widow, Valeria, Diocletian's daughter, who then, with
her mother, Prisca, took refuge in the territories of
Maximinus Daza. The latter offered to marry Valeria,
but on her refusal exiled both her and her mother into
the deserts of Syria, and put to death several of their
attendants. Diocletian remonstrated in favor of his
wife and daughter, but to no purpose, and his grief on
this occasion probably hastened his death, which took
place at his residence near Salona in July, 313. In the
following year his wife and daughter were put to death
by order of Licinius.
THE VICTIMS OF GALERIUS.
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Diocletian ranks among the most distinguished emperors
of Rome; his reign of twenty-one years was upon the
whole prosperous for the empire, and creditable to the
Roman name. He was severe, but not wantonly cruel, and
we ought to remember that mercy was not a Roman virtue.
His conduct after his abdication shows that his was no
common mind. The chief charge against him is his
haughtiness in introducing the Oriental ceremonial of
prostration into the Roman court. The Christian
writers, and especially Lactantius, have spoken
unfavorably of him; but Lactantius cannot be implicitly
trusted. Of the regular historians of his reign we
have only the meagre narratives of Eutropius and
Aurelius Victor, the others being now lost; but notices
of Diocletian's life are scattered about in various
authors, Libanius, Vopiscus, Eusebius, Julian in his
"Cæsars," and the contemporary panegyrists, Eumenes and
Mamertinus. His laws or edicts are in the "Code." Among
other useful reforms, he abolished the
frumentarii, or licensed informers, who were
stationed in every province to
[56] report any attempt at mutiny or rebellion, and who
basely enriched themselves by working on the fears of
the inhabitants. He also reformed and reduced the
number of the insolent Prætorians, who were afterward
totally disbanded by Constantine.
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