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Chapter
X.—Valerian and the Persecution under
him.
1. Gallus and the other rulers,2210
2210 οἱ ἀμφὶ τὸν
Γ€λλον. Eusebius
is undoubtedly referring to Gallus, Volusian, his son and co-regent,
and Æmilian, his enemy and successor. Gallus himself, with his son
Volusian, whom he made Cæsar and co-regent, reigned from the
latter part of the year 251 to about the middle of the year 253, when
the empire was usurped by Æmilian, and he and his son were slain.
Æmilian was recognized by the senate as the legal emperor, but
within four months Valerian, Gallus’ leading general,—who
had already been proclaimed emperor by his legions,—revenged the
murder of Gallus and came to the throne. Valerian reigned until 260,
when his son Gallienus, who had been associated with him in the
government from the beginning, succeeded him and reigned until
268. |
having held the government less than two years, were overthrown, and
Valerian, with his son Gallienus, received the empire. The
circumstances which Dionysius relates of him we may learn from his
epistle to Hermammon,2211
2211 Upon this epistle, see above, chap. 1, note 3. | in which he gives
the following account:
2. “And in like manner it
is revealed to John; ‘For there was given to him,’ he says,
‘a mouth speaking great things and blasphemy; and there was given
unto him authority and forty and two months.’2212
3. It is wonderful that both of
these things occurred under Valerian; and it is the more remarkable in
this case when we consider his previous conduct, for he had been mild
and friendly toward the men of God, for none of the emperors before him
had treated them so kindly and favorably; and not even those who were
said openly to be Christians2213
2213 Philip was the only emperor before this time that was openly said
to have been a Christian (see above, Bk. VI. chap. 34, note 2).
Alexander Severus was very favorable to the Christians, and Eusebius
may have been thinking of him also in this connection. | received them
with such manifest hospitality and friendliness as he did at the
beginning of his reign. For his entire house was filled with pious
persons and was a church of God.
4. But the teacher and ruler of
the synagogue of the Magi from Egypt2214
2214 viz. Macrianus, one of the ablest of Valerian’s generals,
who had acquired great influence over him and had been raised by him to
the highest position in the army and made his chief counselor.
Dionysius is the only one to tell us that he was the chief of the
Egyptian magicians. Gibbon doubts the statement, but Macrianus may well
have been an Egyptian by birth and devoted, as so many of the Egyptians
were, to arts of magic, and have gained power over Valerian in this way
which he could have gained in no other. It is not necessary of course
to understand Dionysius’ words as implying that Macrianus was
officially at the head of the body of Egyptian magicians, but simply
that he was the greatest, or one of the greatest, of them. He figures
in our other sources simply as a military and political character, but
it was natural for Dionysius to emphasize his addiction to magic,
though he could hardly have done it had Macrianus’ practices in
this respect not been commonly known. | persuaded
him to change his course, urging him to slay and persecute pure and
holy men2215
2215 The
persecution which the Christians suffered under Valerian was more
terrible than any other except that of Diocletian. Numerous calamities
took place during his reign. The barbarians were constantly invading
and ravaging the borders of the empire, and on the east the Persians
did great damage. Still worse was the terrible plague which had begun
in the reign of Decius and raged for about fifteen years. All these
calamities aroused the religious fears of the emperor. Dionysius tells
us that he was induced by Macrianus to have recourse to human
sacrifices and other similar means of penetrating the events of the
future, and when these rites failed, the presence of
Christians—irreligious men hated by the gods—in the
imperial family was urged as the reason for the failure, and thus the
hostility of the emperor was aroused against all Christians. As a
consequence an edict was published in 257 requiring all persons to
conform at least outwardly to the religion of Rome on the penalty of
exile. And at the same time the Christians were prohibited from holding
religious services, upon pain of death. In 258 followed a rescript of
terrible severity. Only the clergy and the higher ranks of the laity
were attacked, but they were sentenced to death if they refused to
repent, and the clergy, apparently, whether they repented or not. The
persecution continued until Valerian’s captivity, which took
place probably late in 260. The dates during this period are very
uncertain, but Dionysius’ statement that the persecution
continued forty-two months is probably not far out of the way; from
late in the year 257 to the year 261, when it was brought to an end by
Gallienus. In Egypt and the Orient the persecution seems to have
continued a few months longer than elsewhere (see chap. 13, note 3).
The martyrs were very numerous during the Valerian persecution,
especially in Rome and Africa. The most noted were Cyprian and Xystus
II. On the details of the persecution, see Tillemont, H. E. IV.
p. 1 sq. | because they opposed and hindered
the corrupt and abominable incantations. For there are and there were
men who, being present and being seen, though they only breathed and
spoke, were able to scatter the counsels of the sinful demons. And he
induced him to practice initiations and abominable sorceries and to
offer unacceptable sacrifices; to slay innumerable children and to
sacrifice the offspring of unhappy fathers; to divide the bowels of
new-born babes and to mutilate and cut to pieces the creatures of God,
as if by such practices they could attain happiness.”
5. He adds to this the
following: “Splendid indeed were the thank-offerings which
Macrianus brought them2216
for the empire
which was the object of his hopes. He is said to have been formerly the
emperor’s general finance minister2217
2217 ἐπῖ
τῶν καθόλου
λόγων. The phrase is
equivalent to the Latin Rationalis or Procurator summæ
rei, an official who had charge of the imperial finances, and who
might be called either treasurer or finance minister. The position
which Macrianus held seems to have been the highest civil position in
the empire (cf. Valesius’ note ad locum). Gibbon calls him
Prætorian Prefect, and since he was the most famous of
Valerian’s generals, he doubtless held that position also, though
I am not aware that any of our sources state that he did. | ; yet he did nothing praiseworthy or of
general benefit,2218
2218 The Greek contains a play upon the words καθόλου and λόγος in this
sentence. It reads ὅς πρότερον
μὲν ἐπὶ τῶν
καθόλου
λόγων
λεγόμενος
εἶναι
βασιλέως,
οὐδὲν
εὔλογον οὐδὲ
καθολικὸν
ἐφρόνησεν. The play upon the word καθόλου continues in the next sentence, where the Greek runs τὸ
καθόλου μὴ
βλέπουσιν, and in the following, where it reads οὐ γὰρ
συνῆκε τὴν
καθόλου
πρόνοιαν. Again in the next sentence the adjective καθολική
occurs: “his universal
Church.” | but fell under
the prophetic saying,
6. ‘Woe unto those who
prophesy from their own heart and do not consider the general
good.’2219 For he did not perceive the general
Providence, nor did he look for the judgment of Him who is before all,
and through all, and over all. Wherefore he became an enemy of his
Catholic2220
2220 καθολικῆς, “catholic” in the sense of
“general” or “universal,” the play upon the
word still continuing. | Church, and alienated and estranged
himself from the compassion of God, and fled as far as possible from
his salvation. In this he showed the truth of his own name.”2221
2221 Μακριανός. The Greek word μακρ€ν means “far,” “at a distance.” |
7. And again, farther on he
says: “For Valerian, being instigated to such acts by this man,
was given over to insults and reproaches, according to what was said by
Isaiah: ‘They have chosen their own ways and their abominations
in which their soul delighted; I also will choose their delusions and
will render unto them their sins.’2222
8. But this man2223
madly desired the kingdom though
unworthy of it, and being unable to put the royal garment on his
crippled body, set forward his two sons to bear their father’s
sins.2224
2224 Valerian reposed complete confidence in Macrianus and followed his
advice in the conduct of the wars against the Persians. The result was
that by Macrianus’ “weak or wicked counsels the imperial
army was betrayed into a situation where valor and military skill were
equally unavailing.” (Gibbon.) Dionysius, in chap. 23, below,
directly states that Macrianus betrayed Valerian, and this is the view
of the case commonly taken. Valerian fell into the hands of the
Persians (late in 260 a.d.), and Macrianus was
proclaimed emperor by his troops, and on account of his lameness (as
both Dionysius and Zonaras put it) or his age, associated with him his
two sons, Quietus and Macrianus. After some months he left his son
Quietus in charge of Syria, and designing to make himself master of the
Occident, marched with his son Macrianus against Gallienus, but was met
in Illyrium by the Pretender Aureolus (262) and defeated, and both
himself and son slain. His son Quietus meanwhile was besieged in Edessa
by the Pretender Odenathus and slain. Cf. Tillemont’s Histoire
des Empereurs, III. p. 333 sq. and p. 340 sq. | For concerning them the declaration
which God spoke was plain, ‘Visiting the iniquities of the
fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them
that hate me.’2225
9. For heaping on the heads of
his sons his own evil desires, in which he had met with success,2226
2226 ηὐτύχει. Three mss., followed by
Stephanus, Valesius, Burton, Stroth (and by the translators Closs,
Crusè, and Salmond in the Ante-Nicene Fathers, VI. p. 107),
read ἠτύχει,
“failed” (“in whose gratification he
failed”). ηὐτύχει, however, is supported by overwhelming ms. authority, and is adopted by Schwegler and Heinichen,
and approved by Valesius in his notes. It seems at first sight the
harder reading, and is, therefore, in itself to be preferred to the
easier reading, ἠτύχει. Although it seems harder, it is really fully in accord with what
has preceded. Macrianus had not made himself emperor (if Dionysius is
to be believed), but he had succeeded fully in his desires, in that he
had raised his sons to the purple. If he had acquired such power as to
be able to do that, he must have given them the position, because he
preferred to govern in that way; and if that be so, he could hardly be
said to have failed in his desires. | he wiped off upon them his own
wickedness and hatred toward God.”
Dionysius relates these things
concerning Valerian.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|