Roman history,
whether Latin or Greek, graphically illustrates the importance of widespread
ownership to national security — and the inevitable tendency of the rich and
powerful to concentrate ownership, whether privately (capitalism) or publicly
(socialism) to the detriment of national wellbeing, even disaster.
Basileus ("Emperor"...sort of) Heraclius ... maybe. |
He told them that the commanders were guilty of a ridiculous error,
when, at the head of their armies, they exhorted the common soldiers to fight
for their sepulchers and altars; when not any amongst so many Romans is
possessed of either altar or monument, neither have they any houses of their
own, or hearths of their ancestors to defend.
They fought indeed and were slain, but it was to maintain the luxury and
the wealth of other men. They were
styled the masters of the world, but in the meantime had not one foot of ground
which they could call their own.
Not surprisingly,
it was widespread ownership of landed capital that secured the economic and
military might of Byzantium from the seventh to the eleventh centuries. This covered the period from the restoration of
the Empire by Heraclius, to the disaster of Manzikert.
Heraclius, Blessed Virgin, and Consort |
Greece had been
lost to the Slavs, while the Persians were rampaging throughout Asia
Minor. Jerusalem had fallen, the True
Cross and other sacred relics of the Crucifixion had been carried off, and a
number of shrines, including the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, had been
pillaged and burned. Chaos reigned.
Instead of
rushing headlong into battle and dying with great glory and even greater
futility — at which many subsequent historians expressed complete bafflement —
Heraclius set about completely reorganizing the Imperial government and the
economy. Faced with an empty treasury, a
demoralized army, and a hopelessly corrupt bureaucracy, it was a daunting task.
Heraclius’s first
act was to divide the territory remaining to him into “Themes,” a term
previously used for a division of troops.
In place of the former complete centralization, power was devolved, with
each Theme being semi-autonomous under a Strategos, who served as both civil
governor and military commander.
Heraclius, Consort, and 1/72 Roman pound of gold. |
At one stroke,
Heraclius created a solid national army of native, land-owning, battle-ready
reservists who could be called up at any time and who, simultaneously, began a
restoration of the tax base. This
replaced the haphazard use of conscripts and mercenaries, both notoriously
uncertain in number and unreliable in battle as well as untrained in organized
warfare.
The economic
benefits were not immediately realized, however, and Heraclius still had to
raise money for his campaign to drive out the Persians and conquer the Slavs. Increased taxes, forced loans, advances from
rich relatives and friends, and heavy fines on corrupt bureaucrats provided
some funding.
The primary
source of cash, however, came from the Orthodox Church. Somewhat apocalyptically, the Patriarch
Sergius considered the war the final conflict between the holy armies of Christ
and the fire-worshipping Zoroastrians.
Heraclius receiving envoys. |
Finally, after
twelve years and a series of adventures that sound like the plot of a bad
historical novel, Heraclius was ready. He
carefully selected as training ground an area only a few stadia from where
Alexander the Great had landed in his campaign against the Persians.
There the
Basileus spent the entire summer of 622 engaged in intensive training and
morale-building, telling his soldiers repeatedly that they were God’s Chosen
Instruments against the forces of Antichrist, and that the Lord of Hosts would
Himself ensure their victory. Modern
skeptics might be tempted to argue or sneer, but the appeal to faith and
patriotism was effective, and Heraclius succeeded, although the war that began
that autumn was long and difficult.
Heraclius’s
reforms saved the Empire, but even they could be improved. During his reign, despite the reorganization,
a few great magnates controlled most of the land. A century later, as reflected in “the
Farmers’ Law” of the late seventh or early eighth century, small holdings had
proliferated, thanks to Heraclius’s colonization program, a sort of Medieval
Homestead Act.
This created a
great and growing reserve army for the Empire composed of provincial militia
whose strength derived from the economic power of widespread capital ownership. This maintained the security of the state
until the bureaucratic party, envious of the economic independence of the common
people and fearful of the military, began undermining both by destroying small
ownership and concentrating power in the hands of the government administration
that they controlled.
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