XXIX
His first move against Lazica was as follows. He sent into the country
a great amount of lumber suitable for the construction of ships,
explaining to no one what his purpose was in so doing, but ostensibly
he was sending it in order to set up engines of war on the
fortifications of Petra. Next he chose out three hundred able warriors
of the Persians, and sent them there under command of Phabrizus, whom
I have lately mentioned, ordering him to make away with Goubazes as
secretly as possible; as for the rest, he himself would take care. Now
when this lumber had been conveyed to Lazica, it happened that it was
struck suddenly by lightning and reduced to ashes. And Phabrizus, upon
arriving in Lazica with the three hundred, began to contrive so that
he might carry out the orders received by him from Chosroes regarding
Goubazes. Now it happened that one of the men of note among the
Colchians, Pharsanses by name, had quarrelled with Goubazes and in
consequence had become exceedingly hostile to him, and now he did not
dare at all to go into the presence of the king. When this was learned
by Phabrizus, he summoned Pharsanses and in a conference with him
disclosed the whole project, and enquired of the man in what way he
ought to go about the execution of the deed. And it seemed best to
them after deliberating together that Phabrizus should go into the
city of Petra, and should summon Goubazes there, in order to announce
to him what the king had decided concerning the interests of the Lazi.
But Pharsanses secretly revealed to Goubazes what was being
prepared. He, accordingly, did not come to Phabrizus at all, but began
openly to plan a revolt. Then Phabrizus commanded the other Persians
to attend as carefully as they could to the guarding of Petra, and to
make everything as secure as possible against a siege, and he himself
with the three hundred returned homeward without having accomplished
his purpose. And Goubazes reported to the Emperor Justinian the
condition in which they were, and begged him to grant forgiveness for
what the Lazi had done in the past, and to come to their defence with
all his strength, since they desired to be rid of the Median rule. For
if left by themselves the Colchians would not be able to repel the
power of the Persians.
When the Emperor Justinian heard this, he was overjoyed, and sent
seven thousand men under the leadership of Dagisthaeus and a thousand
Tzani to the assistance of the Lazi. And when this force reached the
land of Colchis, they encamped together with Goubazes and the Lazi
about the fortifications of Petra and commenced a siege. But since the
Persians who were there made a most stalwart defence from the wall, it
came about that much time was spent in the siege; for the Persians had
put away an ample store of victuals in the town. And Chosroes, being
greatly disturbed by these things, dispatched a great army of horse
and foot against the besiegers, putting Mermeroes in command of them.
And when Goubazes learned of this, he considered the matter together
with Dagisthaeus and acted in the manner which I shall presently set
forth.
The river Boas rises close to the territory of the
Tzani among the Armenians who dwell around Pharangium. And at first
its course inclines to the right for a great distance, and its stream
is small and can be forded by anyone with no trouble as far as the
place where the territory of the Iberians lies on the right, and the
end of the Caucasus lies directly opposite.
In that place many nations
have their homes, and among them the Alani and Abasgi, who are
Christians and friends of the Romans from of old; also the Zechi, and
after them the Huns who bear the name Sabeiri. But when this river
reaches the point which marks the termination of the Caucasus and of
Iberia as well, there other waters also are added to it and it becomes
much larger and from there flows on bearing the name of Phasis instead
of Boas[26]; and it becomes a navigable stream as far as the so-called
Euxine Sea into which it empties; and on either side of it lies
Lazica. Now on the right of the stream particularly the whole country
for a great distance is populated by the people of Lazica as far as
the boundary of Iberia. For all the villages of the Lazi are here
beyond the river, and towns have been built there from of old, among
which are Archaeopolis, a very strong place, and Sebastopolis, and the
fortress of Pitius, and Scanda and Sarapanis over against the boundary
of Iberia. Moreover there are two cities of the greatest importance in
that region, Rhodopolis and Mocheresis. But on the left of the river,
while the country belongs to Lazica as far as one day's journey for an
unencumbered traveller, the land is without human habitation.
Adjoining this land is the home of the Romans who are called
Pontic. Now it was in the territory of Lazica, in the part which was
altogether uninhabited, that the Emperor Justinian founded the city of
Petra in my own time. This was the place where John, surnamed Tzibus,
established the monopoly, as I have told in the previous
narrative,[27] and gave cause to the Lazi to revolt. And as one leaves
the city of Petra going southward, the Roman territory commences
immediately, and there are populous towns there, and one which bears
the name of Rhizaeum, also Athens and certain others as far as
Trapezus. Now when the Lazi brought in Chosroes, they crossed the
River Boas and came to Petra keeping the Phasis on the right, because,
as they said, they would thus provide against being compelled to spend
much time and trouble in ferrying the men across the River Phasis, but
in reality they did not wish to display their own homes to the
Persians. And yet Lazica is everywhere difficult to traverse both to
the right and to the left of the River Phasis. For there are on both
sides of the river exceedingly high and jagged mountains, and as a
result the passes are narrow and very long. (The Romans call the roads
through such passes "clisurae" when they put their own word into a
Greek form.[28]) But since at that time Lazica happened to be
unguarded, the Persians had reached Petra very easily with the Lazi
who were their guides.
But on this occasion Goubazes, upon learning of the advance of the
Persians, directed Dagisthaeus to send some men to guard with all
their strength the pass which is below the River Phasis, and he
bade him not on any account to abandon the siege until they should be
able to capture Petra and the Persians in it. He himself meanwhile
with the whole Colchian army came to the frontier of Lazica, in order
to devote all his strength to guarding the pass there. Now it happened
that long before he had persuaded the Alani and Sabeiri to form an
alliance with him, and they had agreed for three centenaria not merely
to assist the Lazi in guarding the land from plunder, but also to
render Iberia so destitute of men that not even the Persians would be
able to come in from there in the future. And Goubazes had promised
that the emperor would give them this money. So he reported the
agreement to the Emperor Justinian and besought him to send this money
for the barbarians and afford the Lazi some consolation in their great
distress. He also stated that the treasury owed him his salary for ten
years, for though he was assigned a post among the privy counsellors
in the palace, he had received no payment from it since the time when
Chosroes came into the land of Colchis. And the Emperor Justinian
intended to fulfil this request, but some business came up to occupy
his attention and he did not send the money at the proper time. So
Goubazes was thus engaged.
But Dagisthaeus, being a rather young man and by no means competent to
carry on a war against Persia, did not handle the situation properly.
For while he ought to have sent certainly the greater part of the army
to the pass, and perhaps should have assisted in person in this
enterprise, he sent only one hundred men, just as if he were managing
a matter of secondary importance. He himself, moreover, though
besieging Petra with the whole army, accomplished nothing, although
the enemy were few. For while they had been at the beginning not less
than fifteen hundred, they had been shot at by Romans and Lazi in
their fighting at the wall for a long time, and had made a display of
valour such as no others known to us have made, so that many were
falling constantly and they were reduced to an exceedingly small
number. So while the Persians, plunged in despair and at a loss what
to do, were remaining quiet, the Romans made a trench along the wall
for a short space, and the circuit-wall at this point fell
immediately. But it happened that inside this space there was a
building which did not stand back at all from the circuit-wall, and
this reached to the whole length of the fallen portion; thus, taking
the place of the wall for the besieged, it rendered them secure none
the less. But this was not sufficient greatly to disturb the Romans.
For knowing well that by doing the same thing elsewhere they would
capture the city with the greatest ease, they became still more
hopeful than before. For this reason Dagisthaeus sent word to the
emperor of what had come to pass, and proposed that prizes of victory
should be in readiness for him, indicating what rewards the emperor
should bestow upon himself and his brother; for he would capture Petra
after no great time. So the Romans and the Tzani made a most vigorous
assault upon the wall, but the Persians unexpectedly withstood them,
although only a very few were left. And since the Romans were
accomplishing nothing by assaulting the wall, they again turned to
digging. And they went so far in this work that the foundations of
the circuit-wall were no longer on solid ground, but stood for the
most part over empty space, and, in the nature of things, would fall
almost immediately. And if Dagisthaeus had been willing immediately to
apply fire to the foundations, I think that the city would have been
captured by them straightway; but, as it was, he was awaiting
encouragement from the emperor, and so, always hesitating and wasting
time, he remained inactive. Such, then, was the course of events in
the Roman camp.
XXX
But Mermeroes, after passing the Iberian frontier with the whole
Median army, was moving forward with the River Phasis on his right.
For he was quite unwilling to go through the country of Lazica, lest
any obstacle should confront him there. For he was eager to save the
city of Petra and the Persians in it, even though a portion of the
circuit-wall had fallen down suddenly. For it had been hanging in the
air, as I have said; and volunteers from the Roman army to the number
of fifty got inside the city, and raised the shout proclaiming the
Emperor Justinian triumphant. These men were led by a young man of
Armenian birth, John by name, the son of Thomas whom they used to call
by the surname Gouzes. This Thomas had built many of the strongholds
about Lazica at the direction of the emperor, and he commanded the
soldiers there, seeming to the emperor an intelligent person. Now
John, when the Persians joined battle with his men, was wounded and
straightway withdrew to the camp with his followers, since no one else
of the Roman army came to support him. Meanwhile the Persian Mirranes
who commanded the garrison in Petra, fearing for the city, directed
all the Persians to keep guard with the greatest diligence, and he
himself went to Dagisthaeus, and addressed him with fawning speeches
and deceptive words, agreeing readily to surrender the city not long
afterwards. In this way he succeeded in deceiving him so that the
Roman army did not immediately enter the city.
Now when the army of Mermeroes came to the pass, the Roman garrison,
numbering one hundred men, confronted them there and offered a
stalwart resistance, and they held in check their opponents who were
attempting the entrance. But the Persians by no means withdrew, but
those who fell were constantly replaced by others, and they kept
advancing, trying with all their strength to force their way in. Among
the Persians more than a thousand perished, but at last the Romans
were worn out with killing, and, being forced back by the throng, they
withdrew, and running up to the heights of the mountain there were
saved. Dagisthaeus, upon learning this, straightway abandoned the
siege without giving any commands to the army, and proceeded to the
River Phasis; and all the Romans followed him, leaving their
possessions behind in the camp. And when the Persians observed what
was being done, they opened their gates and came forth, and
approached the tents of the enemy in order to capture the camp. But
the Tzani, who had not followed after Dagisthaeus, as it happened,
rushed out to defend the camp, and they routed the enemy without
difficulty and killed many. So the Persians fled inside their
fortifications, and the Tzani, after plundering the Roman camp
proceeded straight for Rhizaeum. And from there they came to Athens
and betook themselves to their homes through the territory of the
Trapezuntines.
And Mermeroes and the Median army came there on the ninth day after
the withdrawal of Dagisthaeus; and in the city they found left of the
Persian garrison three hundred and fifty men wounded and unfit for
fighting, and only one hundred and fifty men unhurt; for all the rest
had perished. Now the survivors had in no case thrown the bodies of
the fallen outside the fortifications, but though stifled by the evil
stench, they held out in a manner beyond belief, in order that they
might not afford the enemy any encouragement for the prosecution of
the siege, by letting them know that most of their number had
perished. And Mermeroes remarked by way of a taunt that the Roman
state was worthy of tears and lamentation, because they had come to
such a state of weakness that they had been unable by any device to
capture one hundred and fifty Persians without a wall. And he was
eager to build up the portions of the circuit-wall which had fallen
down; but since at the moment he had neither lime nor any of the other
necessary materials for the building ready at hand, he devised the
following plan. Filling with sand the linen bags in which the
Persians had carried their provisions into the land of Colchis, he
laid them in the place of the stones, and the bags thus arranged took
the place of the wall. And choosing out three thousand of his able
fighting men, he left them there, depositing with them victuals for no
great length of time, and commanding them to attend to the building of
the fortifications; then he himself with all the rest of the army
turned back and marched away.
But since, if he went from there by the same road, no means of
provisioning his army was available, since he had left everything in
Petra which had been brought in by the army from Iberia, he planned to
go by another route through the mountains, where he learned that the
country was inhabited, in order that by foraging there he might be
able to live off the land. In the course of this journey one of the
notables among the Lazi, Phoubelis by name, laid an ambush for the
Persians while camping for the night, bringing with him Dagisthaeus
with two thousand of the Romans; and these men, making a sudden
attack, killed some of the Persians who were grazing their horses, and
after securing the horses as plunder they shortly withdrew. Thus,
then, Mermeroes with the Median army departed from there.
But Goubazes, upon learning what had befallen the Romans both at Petra
and at the pass, did not even so become frightened, nor did he give up
the guarding of the pass where he was, considering that their hope
centred in that place. For he understood that, even if the Persians
had been able by forcing back the Romans on the left of the River
Phasis to cross over the pass and get into Petra, they could
thereby inflict no injury upon the land of the Lazi, since they were
utterly unable to cross the Phasis, in particular because no ships
were at their disposal. For in depth this river is not inferior to the
deepest rivers, and it spreads out to a great width. Moreover it has
such a strong current that when it empties into the sea, it goes on as
a separate stream for a very great distance, without mingling at all
with the sea-water. Indeed, those who navigate in those parts are able
to draw up drinking water in the midst of the sea. Moreover, the Lazi
have erected fortresses all along the right bank of the river, in
order that, even when the enemy are ferried across in boats, they may
not be able to disembark on the land.
The Emperor Justinian at this time sent to the nation of the Sabeiri
the money which had been agreed upon, and he rewarded Goubazes and the
Lazi with additional sums of money. And it happened that long before
this time he had sent another considerable army also to Lazica, which
had not yet arrived there. The commander of this army was
Rhecithancus, from Thrace, a man of discretion and a capable warrior.
Such then was the course of these events.
Now when Mermeroes got into the mountains, as I have said, he was
anxious to fill Petra with provisions from there. For he did not by
any means think that the victuals which they had brought in with them
would suffice for the garrison there, amounting to three thousand men.
But since the supplies they found along the way barely sufficed for
the provisioning of that army, which numbered no less than thirty
thousand, and since on this account they were able to send nothing
at all of consequence to Petra, upon consideration he found it better
for them that the greater part of the army should depart from the land
of Colchis, and that some few should remain there, who were to convey
to the garrison in Petra the most of the provisions which they might
find, while using the rest to maintain themselves comfortably. He
therefore selected five thousand men and left them there, appointing
as commanders over them Phabrizus and three others. For it seemed to
him unnecessary to leave more men there, since there was no enemy at
all. And he himself with the rest of the army came into Persarmenia
and remained quietly in the country around Doubios.
Now the five thousand, upon coming nearer to the frontier of Lazica,
encamped in a body beside the Phasis River, and from there they went
about in small bands and plundered the neighbouring country. Now when
Goubazes perceived this, he sent word to Dagisthaeus to hasten there
to his assistance: for it would be possible for them to do the enemy
some great harm. And he did as directed, moving forward with the whole
Roman army with the River Phasis on the left, until he came to the
place where the Lazi where encamped on the opposite bank of the river.
Now it happened that the Phasis could be forded at this point, a fact
which neither the Romans nor the Persians suspected in the least
because of their lack of familiarity with these regions; but the Lazi
knew it well, and they made the crossing suddenly and joined the Roman
army. And the Persians chose out a thousand men of repute among them
and sent them forth, that no one might advance against the camp to
harm it. And two of this force, who had gone out ahead of their
fellows to reconnoitre, fell unexpectedly into the hands of the enemy
and informed them of the whole situation. The Romans, therefore, and
the Lazi fell suddenly upon the thousand men, and not one of them
succeeded in escaping, but the most of them were slain, while some
also were captured; and through these the men of Goubazes and
Dagisthaeus succeeded in learning the numbers of the Median army and
the length of the journey to them and the condition in which they then
were. They therefore broke camp and marched against them with their
whole army, calculating so that they would fall upon them well on in
the night; their own force amounted to fourteen thousand men. Now the
Persians, having no thought of an enemy in their minds, were enjoying
a long sleep; for they supposed that the river was impassable, and
that the thousand men, with no one to oppose them, were making a long
march somewhere. But the Romans and Lazi at early dawn unexpectedly
fell upon them, and they found some still buried in slumber and others
just roused from sleep and lying defenceless upon their beds. Not one
of them, therefore, thought of resistance, and the majority were
caught and killed, while some also were captured by the enemy, among
whom happened to be one of the commanders; only a few escaped in the
darkness and were saved. And the Romans and Lazi captured the camp and
all the standards, and they also secured many weapons and a great deal
of money as plunder, besides great numbers of horses and mules. And
pursuing them for a very great distance they came well into Iberia.
There they happened upon certain others of the Persians also and
slew a great number. Thus the Persians departed from Lazica; and the
Romans and Lazi found there all the supplies, including great
quantities of flour, which the barbarians had brought in from Iberia,
in order to transport them to Petra, and they burned them all. And
they left a large number of Lazi in the pass, so that it might no
longer be possible for the Persians to carry in supplies to Petra, and
they returned with all the plunder and the captives.
549 A.D.
And the fourth
year of the truce between the Romans and Persians came to an end,
being the twenty-third year of the reign of the Emperor
Justinian.
And John the Cappadocian one year before this came to Byzantium at the
summons of the emperor. For at that time the Empress Theodora had
reached the term of her life. However, he was quite unable to recover
any of his former dignities, but he continued to hold the priestly
honour against his will; and yet the vision had often come to the man
that he would arrive at royalty. For the divine power is accustomed to
tempt those whose minds are not solidly grounded by nature, by holding
before their vision, on great and lofty hopes, that which is counted
splendid among men. At any rate the marvel-mongers were always
predicting to this John many such imaginary things, and especially
that he was bound to be clothed in the garment of Augustus. Now there
was a certain priest in Byzantium, Augustus by name, who guarded the
treasures of the temple of Sophia. So when John had been shorn and
declared worthy of the priestly dignity by force, inasmuch as he had
no garment becoming a priest, he had been compelled by those who were
in charge of this business to put on the cloak and the tunic of this
Augustus who was near by, and in this, I suppose, his prophecy reached
its fulfilment.
FOOTNOTES:
[1]
That is, the Saracens subject to the Romans and those
subject to the Persians.
[2]
Cf. Book I. xxii. 4.
[3]
The Huns placed a part of their force in the rear of the
defenders of the pass, which lies between the sea and the mountains,
sending them around by the same path, probably, as that used by Xerxes
when he destroyed Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans; see
Herod, vii. 216-218.
[4]
"Secretary of secrets."
[5]
Cf. Book I. xxii. 4.
[6]
Cf. Book II. i. 13; iii. 47.
[7]
Cf. Book I. xxii. 4.
[8]
Cf. Book II. xxi. 30-32.
[9]
This term was applied to the "Blue Faction" in Byzantium
and elsewhere.
[10]
Cf. Book I. xxii. 4.
[11]
Nine MS. lines are missing at this point.
[12]
Cf. Book II. x. 24.
[13]
Cf. Book I. xii. 4 ff.
[14]
Cf. Book I. viii. 21-22.
[15]
Cf. chap. v. 31.
[16]
I.e. "groin."
[17]
Modern Galata.
[18]
The official dress.
[19]
Vesta.
[20]
Cf. section 9 above.
[21]
Cf. Book II. xii. 31-34.
[22]
Latin agger, "mound."
[23]
"Three Towers."
[24]
Cf. Book I. xii. 5 ff.
[25]
Book II. xix. 23.
[26]
Procopius seems to have confused two separate and
distinct rivers.
[27]
Cf. Book II. xv. 11.
[28]
Latin clausura, "a narrow shut-in road."
INDEX
- Abandanes,
- secretary of Chosroes, sent to Belisarius, II.
xxi. 1 ff.;
- his report, II.
xxi. 13,
xxi. 14
- Abasgi, their location, II.
xxix. 15;
- friends of the Romans,
ib.
- Abochorabus, ruler of the Saracens of Arabia, presents the Palm Groves to Justinian, I.
xix. 10 ff.
- Aborrhas River, protects one side of Circesium, II.
v. 2;
- near Theodosiopolis, II.
xix. 29
- Abramus, becomes king of the Homeritae, I.
xx. 3;
- his servile origin, I.
xx. 4;
- defeats two Aethiopian armies, I.
xx. 5-7;
- pays tribute to the Aethiopians, I.
xx. 8;
- his idle promises to Justinian to invade Persia, I.
xx. 13
- Abydus, city opposite Sestus on the Hellespont, II.
iv. 9
- Acacius, father of Adolius, II.
xxi. 2;
- denounces Amazaspes to the emperor, II.
iii. 4;
- slays him treacherously, II.
iii. 5;
- his shameless career as governor of Armenia, II.
iii 6,
iii. 7;
- slain by the Armenians, II.
iii. 7
- Adarbiganon, Chosroes halts there with his army, II.
xxiv. 1;
- the fire-sanctuary located there, II.
xxiv. 2;
- abandoned by Chosroes, II.
xxiv. 12
- Adergoudounbades, made "chanaranges" by Chosroes, I.
vi. 15,
vi. 18;
- saves Cabades from the hand of Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 7 ff.;
- betrayed by his son, I.
xxiii. 13;
- his death, I.
xxiii. 21
- Adolius, son of Acacius, an Armenian, urges severe treatment of Armenians, II.
iii. 10;
- commander of Roman cavalry, II.
xxi. 2,
xxi. 18,
xxi. 20;
- commands a detachment in an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 13;
- killed by a stone, II.
xxv. 35
- Adonachus, commander in Chalcis, II.
xii. 2
- Adrastadaran Salanes, an office in Persia of high authority (lit. "Leader of the Warriors"), I.
vi 18,
xi. 25;
- held only by Seoses, I.
xi. 38
- Adulis, in Aethiopia, the city and harbour, distance from Auxomis, I.
xix. 22;
- home of a certain Roman trader, I.
xx. 4
- Aegypt, its topography, I.
xix. 3;
- John the Cappadocian an exile there, I.
xxv. 43;
- the pestilence there, II.
xxii. 6
- Aeimachus, a butcher of Antioch, his encounter with a Persian horseman, II.
xi. 8 ff.
- Aelas, on the "Red Sea," I.
xix. 3,
xix. 19,
xix. 24
- Aethiopians, location of their country, I.
xix. 17;
- the ships used there, I.
xix. 23;
- iron not produced there nor imported from elsewhere, I.
xix. 24.
xix. 25;
- sought as allies by Justinian, I.
xix. 1,
xx. 9 ff., II.
iii. 40;
- unable to buy silk from the Indians, I.
xx. 12
- Agamemnon, father of Iphigenia, I. ,
xvii. 11
- Agesta, i.e., "agger," employed by the Persians in besieging Edessa, II.
xxvi. 29
- Aigan, Massagete chief, in the Roman army at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 20,
xiv. 39,
xiv. 44
- Alamoundaras, son of Saccice, king of the Saracens, marches with the Persian army, I.
xvii. 1;
- his character and services to the Persians, I.
xvii. 40 ff.;
- advises Cabades to invade Roman territory south of the Euphrates River, I.
xvii. 30 ff.;
- retires with Azarethes before Belisarius, I.
xviii. 9 ff.;
- brings charge against Arethas of violating boundary lines, II.
i. 3;
- war with Arethas, II.
xxviii. 12-14;
- sacrifices to Aphrodite the son of Arethas, II.
xxviii. 13;
- sought as an ally by Justinian, II.
i. 13,
iii. 47;
- accused by Justinian of violating the treaty, II.
iv. 21;
- a menace to Syria and Phoenicia, II.
xvi. 17;
- also to Lebanon, II.
xix. 34
- Alani, their location, II.
xxix. 15;
- friends of the Romans,
ib.;
- neighbours of the Sunitae, I.
xv. 1;
- persuaded by Goubazes to ally themselves with him, II.
xxix. 29
- Albani, a people near the Taurus, I.
x. 1
- Alexander, son of Philip, fortified the Caspian Gates, I.
x. 9;
- Justinian compared with him, II.
ii. 15
- Alexander, ambassador to the Persians, I.
xxii. 1
- Alexandria, visited by the pestilence, II.
xxii. 6;
- citizens of, accused by John the Cappadocian, I.
xxv. 44
- Amazaspes, nephew of Symeon, made ruler of certain Armenian villages, II.
iii. 3;
- denounced to the emperor, II.
iii. 4;
- treacherously slain, II.
iii. 5
- Ambazouces, a Hun, offers to sell to Anastasius the control of the Caspian Gates, I.
x. 10;
- his death, I.
x. 12
- Ambrus, a Saracen Christian, saves Sergiopolis from capture by Chosroes, II.
xx. 10,
xx. 14
- Amida, a city on the border between Armenia and Mesopotamia, I.
xvii. 24;
- distance from Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 6;
- distance from the Nymphius River, I.
viii. 22;
- from Siphrios, I.
viii. 10;
- from Endielon, I.
vii. 5;
- from Thilasamon, I.
ix. 14;
- besieged by Cabades, I.
vii. 3,
vii. 12 ff.;
- bravely defended, I.
vii. 4,
vii. 12 ff.;
- captured by Cabades, I.
vii. 29;
- besieged by the Romans, I.
ix. 1-4;
- recovered by the Romans by purchase, I.
ix. 20,
ix. 23;
- captives of, generously treated by Chosroes, I.
vii. 34;
- citizens relieved of taxes, I.
vii. 35
- Ammodios, a place near Daras, I.
xiii. 15,
xiii. 38;
- II.
xxviii. 35
- Anastasius, Roman emperor, uncle of Hypatius, I.
viii. 2,
xi. 24;
- of Probus, I.
xii. 6;
- and of Pompeius, I.
xxiv. 19;
- refuses to purchase from Ambazouces the control of the Caspian Gates, I.
x. 10,
x. 11,
xvi. 4;
- insurrection raised against him by Vitalianus, I.
viii. 3,
xiii. 10;
- refuses request of Cabades for a loan, I.
vii. 1,
vii. 2;
- shews favour to citizens of Amida, I.
vii. 35;
- sends succour to Amida, I.
viii. 1;
- fortifies Daras, I.
x. 13;
- placates Cabades, I.
x. 17;
- fortifies Theodosiopolis, I.
x. 18,
x. 19;
- his death, I.
xi. 1
- Anastasius of Daras, overthrows tyranny there, I.
xxvi. 8, II.
iv. 15;
- bears a letter from Justinian to Chosroes, II.
iv. 15;
- detained by Chosroes, II.
iv. 26;
- dismissed by Chosroes, II.
v. 27;
- present with Chosroes at the sack of Sura, II.
ix. 10
- Anatolius, General of the East, averts danger to the empire by courtesy to the Persian king, I.
ii. 12-15
- Andreas, of Byzantium, his exploits in single combat, I.
xiii. 30 ff.
- Anglon, village in Persarmenia, II.
xxv. 5;
- Roman armies routed there, II.
xxv. 23 ff.
- Aniabedes, sent by Chosroes to capture Petra, II.
xvii. 4;
- impaled by Chosroes, II.
xvii. 11
- Antinous, city of, in Aegypt, John the Cappadocian imprisoned there, I.
xxv. 43
- Antioch, its importance, I.
xvii. 36, II.
viii. 23,
ix. 3,
x. 5;
- situation, II.
vi. 10,
viii. 21;
- ease with which it might be captured, I.
xvii. 38;
- character of the inhabitants, I.
xvii. 37, II.
viii. 6;
- distance from Beroea, II.
vii. 21;
- from Seleucia, II.
xi. 1;
- visited by an earthquake, II.
xiv. 6;
- the citizens propose to buy off Chosroes, II.
vi. 16;
- besieged by Chosroes, II.
viii. 1 ff.;
- the wall stormed by Chosroes, II.
viii. 8 ff.;
- captured by Chosroes, II.
viii. 20 ff.;
- plundered by Chosroes, II.
ix. 14 ff.;
- burnt, II.
ix. 17,
ix. 18;
- young men of, check the victorious Persians in a street fight, II.
viii. 28,
viii. 29,
viii. 32,
ix. 5;
- citizens of, massacred by the Persians, II.
viii. 34;
- church of, robbed of great treasures by Chosroes, II.
ix. 15,
ix. 16;
- spared in the burning of the city, II.
ix. 18,
x. 6;
- citizens of, receive portent of coming misfortunes, II.
x. 1 ff.;
xiv. 5;
- two women of, their sad fate at the capture of the city, II.
viii. 35;
- captives of, offered for sale by Chosroes, II.
xiii. 2 ff.;
- settled by Chosroes in a newly built city under special laws, II.
xiv. 1 ff.
- Antioch of Chosroes, special laws concerning it, II.
xiv. 3,
xiv. 4
- Antonina, wife of Belisarius, brings about the downfall of John the Cappadocian, I.
xxv. 13 ff.;
- departs to the East, I.
xxv. 23
- Apamea, city of Syria, II.
xi. 2,
xi. 4;
- wood of the Cross preserved there, II.
xi. 14;
- it gives forth a miraculous light in the church, II.
xi. 17,
xi. 18;
- visited by Chosroes, II.
xi. 14 ff.;
- entered by Chosroes and robbed of all its treasure, II.
xi. 24 ff.;
- a citizen of, accuses a Persian of having violated his daughter, II.
xi. 36
- Aphrodite, son of Arethas sacrificed to, II.
xxviii. 13
- Apion, an Aegyptian, manager of finances in the Roman army, I.
viii. 5
- Arabia, its location, I.
xix. 20
- Arabian Gulf, called "Red Sea" by Procopius, I.
xix. 2;
- its description, I.
xix. 2 ff.
- Aratius, in company with Narses defeats Sittas and Belisarius, I.
xii. 21,
xii. 22;
- deserts to the Romans, I.
xii. 22,
xv. 31;
- sent to Italy, I.
xii. 22
- Arcadius, Roman emperor, when about to die makes provision for the safety of his heir, I.
ii. 1 ff.
- Archaeopolis, a strong city of Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Areobindus, son-in-law of Olyvrius, Roman general, I.
viii. 1;
- flees with his army before Cabades, I.
viii. 10,
viii. 11;
- summoned to Byzantium, I.
ix. 1
- Ares, House of, portion of the imperial residence in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 9
- Arethas, son of Gabalas, made king of the Saracens of Arabia by Justinian and pitted against Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 47,
xvii. 48;
- with the Roman army, I.
xviii. 7;
- at the battle on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 26,
xviii. 35;
- quarrels with Alamoundaras, II.
i. 3-7;
- joins Belisarius in Mesopotamia, II.
xvi. 5;
- sent by Belisarius to plunder Assyria, II.
xix. 11,
xix. 15 ff.;
- returns another way, II.
xix. 26 ff.;
- wages war against Alamoundaras, II.
xxviii. 12-14;
- son of, sacrificed to Aphrodite, II.
xxviii. 13
- Argek, a guardsman, his effective fighting against the Persians at Edessa, II.
xxvi. 26,
xxvi. 27
- Armenia, considered by some to extend as far as Amida, I.
xvii. 24;
- Armenians wage war with Persia, I.
v. 10 ff.;
- History of the Armenians, I.
v. 9,
v. 40
- Arsaces, king of Armenia, progenitor of the Arsacidae, II.
iii. 32;
- his abdication, II.
iii. 35
- Arsaces, king of Armenia, wages a truceless war with Persia, I.
v. 10 ff.;
- slandered to Pacurius, I.
v. 16;
- victim of strategem of Magi, betrays himself to Pacurius, I.
v. 19 ff.;
- confined in the Prison of Oblivion, I.
v. 29 ff.;
- kills himself, I.
v. 39
- Arsaces, last king of Armenia, gives his kingdom to Theodosius, II.
iii. 35
- Arsaces, commander in Sura, killed while valiantly defending the city,II
v. 11
- Arsacidae, descendants of the Armenian king, Arsaces, II.
iii. 32; their privileges, II.
iii. 35
- Arsinus River, tributary to the Euphrates, I.
xvii. 21
- Artabanes, son of John, of the Arsacidae, slays Sittas, II.
iii. 25
- Artace, suburb of Cyzicus, I
xxv. 31
- Artemis among the Taurians, sanctuary of, in Celesene, I.
xvii. 11;
- a sanctuary of, founded by Orestes in Pontus, I.
xvii. 15;
- another in Cappadocia, I.
xvii. 18
- Arzamon, in Mesopotamia, distance from Constantina, I.
viii. 10
- Arzanene, district of Armenia beyond the River Nymphius, I.
viii. 21, II.
xv. 7;
- invaded by Celer, I.
viii. 21
- Ascan, a Massagete chief, at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 21,
xiv. 44;
- his exploits at the battle on the Euphrates and his death, I.
xviii. 38
- Asia, entered from the Hellespont by the Huns, II.
iv. 9
- Aspebedes, uncle of Chosroes, I.
xi. 5,
xxiii. 6;
- negotiates a treaty with Celer, I.
ix. 24;
- shares command of invading army, I.
xxi. 4;
- put to death by Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 6
- Aspetiani, their alliance with Sittas frustrated by a misunderstanding, II.
iii. 12-18
- Assyria, plundered by Arethas, II.
xix. 15 ff.
- Athens, a city near Lazica, II.
xxix. 22,
xxx. 14
- Attachas, place in Armenia, distance
- from Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 9
- Augarus, toparch of Edessa, II.
xii. 8;
- friend of Augustus, II.
xii. 8,
xii. 9;
- his visit to Rome, II.
xii. 9 ff.;
- with difficulty persuades Augustus to allow him to return, II.
xii. 11 ff.;
- receives from Augustus the promise of a hippodrome for Edessa, II.
xii. 18;
- his enigmatic reply to the enquiries of the citizens, II.
xii. 19;
- stricken with gout, seeks relief from physicians, II.
xii. 20,
xii. 21;
- invites Christ to come to Edessa, II.
xii. 24;
- cured upon receiving the reply of Christ, II.
xii. 28;
- son of, an unrighteous ruler, delivers over Edessa to Persia, II.
xii. 28
- Augustus, Roman emperor, his
- affection for Augarus, II.
xii. 8-19
- Augustus, priest in Byzantium, II.
xxx. 53,
xxx. 54
- Auxomis, capital city of the Homeritae, I.
xix. 17;
- distance from Adulis, I.
xix. 22;
- from Elephantina and the Roman boundary, I.
xix. 27
- Auxomitae, name applied to some of the Aethiopians, I.
xix. 17
- Azarethes, Persian general, invades Roman territory, I.
xvii. 1,
xviii. 1;
- retires before Belisarius, I.
xviii. 9 ff.;
- exhorts the Persian army, I.
xviii. 27 ff.;
- arrays them for battle, I.
xviii. 30;
- dishonoured by Cabades, I.
xviii. 51 ff.;
- at the siege of Edessa, II.
xxvii. 41
- Baradotus, priest of Constantina,
- his godliness, II.
xiii. 13;
- persuades Cabades to spare Constantina, II.
xiii. 14,
xiii. 15
- Barbalissum, fortress on the Euphrates, distance from Obbane, II.
xii. 4
- Barbarian Plain, The, near Sergiopolis, II.
v. 29
- Baresmanas, Persian general, at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 16,
xiv. 32,
xiv. 45;
- standard bearer of, attacked and killed by Sunicas, I.
xiv. 47-50
- Barlaus, Gate of, in the wall of Edessa, II.
xxvii. 44
- Basilides, appointed quaestor in place of Tribunianus, I.
xxiv. 18
- Basilius, father of John of Edessa, II.
xxi. 27
- Bassaces, son-in-law of John, accompanies him on a mission to Bouzes, II.
iii. 29;
- escapes with his companions from an ambush, II.
iii. 30;
- leads an embassy to the Persian king, II.
iii. 31;
- comes with Armenians to Byzantium, II.
xxi. 34
- Bassicius, trusted friend of the Armenian king Arsaces, I.
v. 17;
- flayed by Pacurius, I.
v. 28
- Batne, fortress one day's journey distant from Edessa, II.
xii. 31
- Belisarius, married to Antonina, I.
xxv. 11;
- in company with Sittas invades Persarmenia, I.
xii. 20,
xii. 21;
- defeated by Narses and Aratius, I.
xii. 22;
- appointed commander of troops in Daras with Procopius his adviser, I.
xii. 24;
- at the command of Justinian undertakes to build a fortress in Mindouos, I.
xiii. 2,
xiii. 3;
- prevented by the Persians, I.
xiii. 4 ff.;
- made General of the East, I.
xiii. 9;
- in company with Hermogenes prepares to meet the Persians at Daras, I.
xiii. 12 ff.;
- at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 19 ff.;
- sends letters to Mirranes, I.
xiv. 1 ff., 7;
- address to his soldiers, I.
xiv. 20 ff.;
- arrays the army on the second day of the battle of Daras, I.
xiv. 28;
- wins a brilliant victory, I.
xiv. 47 ff.;
- recalls the Romans from the pursuit of the Persians, I.
xiv. 53;
- hurries to meet the invading army of Azarethes I.
xviii. 4;
- follows the retiring Persian army, I.
xviii. 9 ff.;
- ridiculed by his army, I.
xviii. 12;
- attempts to dissuade the Romans from battle, I.
xviii. 16 ff.;
- insulted by his army, I.
xviii. 24;
- arrays them for battle, I.
xviii. 25,
xviii. 26;
- fights valiantly after most of the Roman army had been routed, I.
xviii. 41 ff.;
- returns to Byzantium in order to go against the Vandals, I.
xxi. 2;
- his share in quelling the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 40 ff.;
- made General of the East and sent to Libya, I.
xxvi. 1;
- victorious in Italy, II.
i. 1;
- brings Vittigis to Byzantium, II.
iv. 13;
- shares the command of the East with Bouzes, II.
vi. 1;
- summoned from Italy to Byzantium, II.
xiv. 8;
- sent against Chosroes, II.
xiv. 8,
xiv. 13;
- gathers an army in Mesopotamia, II.
xvi. 1 ff.;
- invades Persia, II.
xviii. 1 ff.;
- defeats Nabedes at Nisibis, II.
xviii. 24,
xviii. 25;
- sends Arethas into Assyria, II.
xix. 15;
- attacks Sisauranon, II.
xix. 4 ff.;
- captures it, II.
xix. 24;
- holds consultation with commanders, II.
xix. 35 ff.;
- returns to Roman territory, II.
xix. 45;
- recalled to Byzantium, II.
xix. 49;
- journeys swiftly to the East to confront Chosroes, II.
xx. 20;
- gathers an army at Europum, II.
xx. 24 ff.;
- receives Abandanes, the envoy of Chosroes, I.
xxi. 2 ff.;
- forces Chosroes to retire, II.
xxi. 21;
- gives John of Edessa as a hostage, II.
xxi. 27;
- his great fame, II.
xxi. 28,
xxi. 29;
- summoned to Byzantium, II.
xxi. 34
- Beroea, a town of Syria between Hierapolis and Antioch, II.
vii. 2;
- distance from Chalcis, II.
xii. 1;
- Chosroes demands money from the inhabitants, II.
vii. 5;
- the citizens retire to the acropolis, II.
vii. 7;
- the lower city entered by Chosroes and a large part of it fired, II.
vii. 10,
vii. 11;
- acropolis valiantly defended against Chosroes, II.
vii. 12;
- miserable plight of the besieged, II.
vii. 13;
- citizens capitulate to Chosroes, II.
vii. 35
- Beros, an Erulian leader, encamps near Martinus, II.
xxiv. 14;
- with Philemouth follows Peter into Persia, II.
xxiv. 18
- Bessas, a Goth, officer in the Roman army, I.
viii. 3;
- commander in Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 5
- Bithynians, on the Euxine Sea, II.
xxviii. 23
- Black Gulf, II.
iv. 8
- Black Sea, See "Euxine."
- Blases, brother of Perozes, chosen king in place of Cabades, deposed, I.
v. 2;
- imprisoned and blinded by Cabades, I.
vi. 17
- Blemyes, a people of upper Aegypt, I.
xix. 28;
- receive annual payment from the Roman emperor, I.
xix. 32,
xix. 33;
- Diocletian purposes to hold them in check by means of the Nobatae, I.
xix. 30;
- their religion, I.
xix. 35,
xix. 36
- Bleschames, commander of the Persian soldiers in Sisauranon, II.
xix. 3;
- sent to Byzantium by Belisarius with Persian captives, II.
xix. 24;
- sent to Italy by Justinian, II.
xix. 25
- Blue Faction, their struggles with the Green Faction, I.
xxiv. 2-6;
- favoured by Justinian, II.
xi. 32;
- in the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 7 ff.;
- also called the "Veneti"
- Blue Colonnade, in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 49
- Boas River, considered by Procopius the upper portion of the Phasis, II.
xxix. 14-16
- Boes, a Persian general, I.
xii. 10
- Bolum, fortress in Persarmenia, near which were the gold mines of the Persian king, I.
xv. 18;
- betrayed to the Romans by Isaac, I.
xv. 32,
xv. 33;
- its return demanded by Chosroes, I.
xxii. 3;
- given up by the Romans, I.
xxii. 18
- Boraedes, nephew of Justinian, assists in making Hypatius prisoner, I.
xxiv. 53
- Bosporus, a city on the Euxine, I.
xii. 7;
- citizens of, put themselves under the sway of Justinus, I.
xii. 8;
- Justinian accused of seizing it, II.
iii. 40
- Bouzes, brother of Coutzes, commander in Lebanon, I.
xiii. 5;
- sent to support Belisarius at Mindouos,
ib.;
- commander in Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 5;
- at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 19,
xiii. 25 ff.;
- sent against the Armenians, II.
iii. 28;
- his offers of friendship distrusted by them, II.
iii. 28,
iii. 29;
- slays John treacherously, II.
iii. 31;
- shares the command of the East with Belisarius, II.
vi. 1;
- makes suggestions as to the defence of Hierapolis, II.
vi. 2 ff.;
- abandons the city, II.
vi. 7,
vi. 8;
- prevents the citizens of Edessa from ransoming the captives of Antioch, II.
xiii. 6;
- favours invasion of Persia by Belisarius, II.
xvi. 16;
- takes refuge with Justus in Hierapolis, II.
xx. 20;
- they invite Belisarius to join them, II.
xx. 21 ff.;
- but later come to him at Europum, II.
xx. 28
- Braducius, interpreter of Isdigousnas, II.
xxviii. 41
- Bronze Gate, in the emperor's palace in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 47
- Bulicas, harbour of the Homeritae, I.
xix. 21
- Byzantium, Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 1 ff.;
- suburbs ravaged by Huns, II.
iv. 4;
- visited by the pestilence, II.
xxii. 9 ff.;
- Chosroes contemplates its capture by way of the Euxine, II.
xxviii. 23
-
Cabades, youngest son of Perozes, I.
iv. 2;
- chosen king of Persia, I.
iv. 34;
- introduces innovations into the Persian government displeasing the people, I.
v. 1;
- cast into the Prison of Oblivion, I.
v. 7;
- escapes from it, I.
vi. 7,
vi. 8,
vi. 10;
- enters Persia with an army of Ephthalitae, I.
vi. 10-17;
- appoints Adergoudounbades "chanaranges" I.
vi. 15,
vi. 18;
- deposes Blases, I.
vi.17;
- institutes a new office, I.
vi. 18,
vi. 19;
- appeals to Anastasius
- for a loan, I.
vii. 1;
- invades Roman territory, I.
vii. 3;
- grants request of Jacobus, the hermit, I.
vii. 9-11;
- besieges Amida, I.
vii. 12-29;
- captures Amida, I.
vii. 29;
- puts Glones in command of the city, I.
vii. 33;
- his treatment of the captives of Amida, I.
vii. 34;
- routs the Roman armies near Amida, I.
viii. 8-19;
- shews kindness to Baradotus by sparing Constantina, II.
xiii. 13;
- desirous of capturing Edessa and Constantina, II.
xiii. 8;
- abandons his purpose of capturing Edessa, II.
xiii. 9 ff.;
- retires in order to meet an invasion of the Huns, I.
viii. 19;
- seizes the Caspian Gates, I.
x. 12;
- protests at the fortification of Daras, I.
x. 16;
- solicitude as to his successor, I.
xi. 2 ff.;
- cured by Stephanus of Edessa, II.
xxvi. 31;
- hates his oldest son Caoses, I.
xi. 3, II.
ix. 12;
- requests Justinus to adopt Chosroes, I.
xi. 9,
xi. 20 ff.;
- unwilling to save Seoses, I.
xi. 36,
xi. 37;
- tries to force the Iberians to adopt the Persian religion, I.
xii. 2 ff.;
- sends an army against them, I.
xii. 10;
- sends an army into Roman Armenia, I.
xv. 1;
- his gold mine at Pharangium, I.
xv. 27;
- deprived of the revenue therefrom, I.
xv. 28,
xv. 29;
- treats with the ambassador Rufinus at Daras, I.
xvi. 1 ff.;
- punishes Perozes, I.
xvii. 26 ff.;
- plans a new campaign against the Romans, I.
xvii. 29;
- advised by Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 30 ff.;
- adopts the suggestion of Alamoundaras, I.
xviii. 1;
- dishonours Azarethes, I.
xviii. 51 ff.;
- refuses to negotiate with Hermogenes, I.
xxi. 1;
- bought pearl from the Ephthalitae, I.
iv. 16;
- his last illness, I.
xxi. 17 ff.;
- his ability as a ruler, I.
vi. 19
- Cabades, son of Zames, plot to set him on the Persian throne in place of Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 4;
- ordered to be killed by Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 7;
- escapes by the help of the chanaranges, I.
xxiii. 9 ff.;
- one claiming this name entertained by Justinian in Byzantium, I.
xxiii. 23,
xxiii. 24
- Cadiseni, in the Persian army at the battle of Daras, I.
xiv. 38,
xiv. 39
- Caesar, the title used by the Persians to designate the Roman emperor, II.
xxi. 9,
xi. 35
- Caesarea, the home of Procopius, I.
i. 1
- Caisus, a Homerite, of captain's rank, a fugitive because of murder committed by him, I.
xx. 9,
xx. 10
- Callinicus, city of Mesopotamia, II.
xi. 28;
- on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 13;
- Roman army conveyed thither by boats after the battle on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 50;
- taken by Chosroes, II.
xxi. 30 ff.
- Candidus, priest of Sergiopolis, makes agreement with Chosroes, II.
v. 31;
- punished by Chosroes for failing to keep his agreement, II.
xx. 2 ff.,
xx. 15,
xx. 16
- Caoses, oldest son of Cabades, I.
xi. 3;
- hated by his father, II.
ix. 12;
- claims the throne of Persia upon the death of Cabades, I.
xxi. 20;
- prevented by Mebodes from becoming king, I.
xxi. 22
- Cappadocia, country of Asia embracing a portion of the Taurus, I.
x. 1;
- desired by Chosroes, II.
xxviii. 23;
- visited by Orestes, I.
xvii. 16
- Carrhae, city of Mesopotamia, citizens of, offer money to Chosroes, II.
xiii. 7;
- able to see the smoke of the burning "agger" at Edessa, II.
xxvii. 15
- Caspian Gates, their location and strategic importance, I.
x. 1 ff.;
- fortified by Alexander, I.
x. 9;
- offered to Anastasius by Ambazouces, I.
x. 10;
- seized by Cabades, I.
x. 12,
xvi. 4,
xvi. 7,
xxii. 5;
- guarded by the Persians, II.
x. 21
- Cassandria, known in ancient times as Potidaea, captured by the Huns, II.
iv. 5
- Catholicos, title of the priest of Doubios, II.
xxv. 4
- Caucasus Mountains, I.
xv. 26;
- inhabited by Huns, II.
xv. 3,
xv. 29,
xxviii. 22;
- by Alani, etc., II.
xxix. 15;
- barbarians in, held in check by Lazica, II.
xxviii. 22
- Celer, Roman general, I.
viii. 2;
- invades Arzanene, I.
viii. 21, II.
xv. 7;
- with Patricius and Hypatius besieges Amida, I.
ix. 1;
- negotiates a treaty with Aspebedes, I.
ix. 24
- Celesene, district in Armenia, I.
xvii. 11,
xvii. 21;
- sanctuary of Artemis there, I.
xvii. 11
- Cerataeum, a district of Antioch, II.
x. 7
- Chalcis, city in Syria, distance from Gabboulon, I.
xviii. 8;
- from Beroea, II.
xii. 1;
- saved from Chosroes by money payment, II.
xii. 1,
xii. 2
- Chanaranges (lit. "Commander of the Frontier Troops"), Persian term for "general," I.
v. 4,
vi. 12, xxiii. 7
- Chanaranges, Persian general, shares command of invading army, I.
xxi. 4;
- besieges Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 14,
xxi. 15;
- retires, I.
xxi. 27
- Cherson, a city at the limits of Roman territory on the Euxine, I.
xii. 7
- Chersonesus, its wall assailed by the Huns, II.
iv. 8
- Chorzianene, place in Armenia, Eruli encamp there, II.
xxiv. 14
- Chosroes, third son of Cabades, I.
xi. 5;
- Cabades proposes to Justinus that he adopt Chosroes, I.
xi. 6 ff.;
- Ch. awaits outcome of negotiations regarding his adoption by Justinus, I.
xi. 27;
- retires in anger to Persia, I.
xi. 30;
- declared by Cabades in his testament successor to the throne of Persia, I.
xxi. 17 ff.;
- his election to the kingship, I.
xxi. 22;
- meets Roman ambassadors on the Tigris, I.
xxii. 1 ff.;
- failure of their negotiations, I.
xxii. 12 ff.;
- grants the prayer of Rufinus, I.
xxii. 15;
- concludes the "endless peace." I.
xxii. 16,
xxii. 17;
- his unpopularity among the Persians, I.
xxiii. 1-3;
- plot to dethrone him, I.
xxiii. 3 ff.;
- slays Zames and other male relatives, I.
xxiii. 6;
- orders the chanaranges to slay Cabades, son of Zames, I.
xxiii. 7;
- hears from Varrames how Cabades had been spared, I.
xxiii. 13;
- his punishment of Adergoudounbades, I.
xxiii. 14 ff.;
- destroys Mebodes, I.
xxiii. 25 ff.;
- vexed at Roman successes in Libya, I.
xxvi. 2;
- demands his share of the spoils, I.
xxvi. 3;
- desires to break the treaty with the Romans, II.
i. 1;
- charges Justinian with having broken the treaty, II.
i. 12-14,
x. 13,
16;
- hears with favour the ambassadors of Vittigis, II.
ii. 12;
- receives an embassy from the Armenians, II.
iii. 32 ff.;
- decides to open hostilities against the Romans, II.
iii. 55;
- admonished by Justinian by letter, II.
iv. 17 ff.;
- detains Anastasius, II.
iv. 26;
- dismisses him, II.
v. 27;
- first invasion of Roman territory, II.
v. 1;
- marches towards Syria, II.
v. 4;
- refrains from attacking Zenobia, II.
v. 7;
- arriving at Sura, besieges the city, II.
v. 8 ff.;
- captures it by a strategem, II.
v. 22 ff.;
- marries Euphemia, II.
v. 28;
- releases captives for ransom, II.
v. 29;
- hears the plea of Megas, II.
vi. 18 ff.;
- exacts money from the Hierapolitans, II.
vi. 22-24;
- promises to depart from the East for ten centenaria of gold, II.
vi. 25;
- demands money from the Beroeans, II.
vii. 5;
- enters Beroea and fires a large portion of it, II.
vii. 10, vii. 11;
- besieges the acropolis, II.
vii. 11 ff.;
- reproached by Megas, II.
vii. 19;
- his reply, II.
vii. 20 ff.;
- allows the Beroeans to capitulate, II.
vii. 35;
- moves against Antioch, II.
viii. 1;
- demands money from the citizens of Antioch, II.
viii. 4;
- hears the ambassadors, II.
viii. 5;
- insulted by the citizens, II.
viii. 6;
- storms the city wall, II.
viii. 8 ff.;
- captures Antioch, II.
viii. 20;
- reproached by Zaberganes, II.
viii. 30 ff.;
- addresses the ambassadors, I.
ix. 1 ff.;
- his hesitation in allowing the Persians to enter Antioch, II.
viii. 22-24,
ix. 7;
- his character II.
ix. 8-12;
- orders the plunder of Antioch, II.
ix. 14;
- burns the city, II.
ix. 17,
ix. 18;
- addressed by the ambassadors, II.
x. 10 ff.;
- demands money from them, II.
x. 19 ff.;
- agrees upon terms for peace, II.
x. 24;
- visits Seleucia, II.
xi. 1;
- visits Daphne, II.
xi. 5 ff.;
- burns the sanctuary of Michael at Daphne, II.
xi. 12,
xi. 13;
- proceeds to Apamea, I.
xi. 14;
- enters the city and seizes its treasures, II.
xi. 24 ff.;
- becomes a spectator in the hippodrome, II.
xi. 31 ff.;
- impales a Persian adulterer, II.
xi. 37,
xi. 38;
- exacts money from the citizens of Chalcis, II.
xii. 1,
xii. 2;
- crosses the Euphrates by a bridge, II.
xii. 3 ff.;
- eager to capture Edessa because of the belief of the Christians that it could not be captured, II.
xii. 6 ff.,
29,
31;
- demands and receives money from the citizens, II.
xii. 33,
xii. 34;
- upon receipt of a letter from Justinian prepares for departure, II.
xiii. 1,
xiii. 2;
- protests at the offer of money by the citizens of Carrhae, II.
xiii. 7;
- accepts money from the citizens of Constantina, II.
xiii. 8;
- claims Constantina as his possession by inheritance, ib., II.
xiii. 15;
- besieges Daras, II.
xi. 28,
xiii. 16;
- abandons the siege of Daras upon receipt of money, II.
xiii. 28;
- charged by Justinian with breaking the treaty, II.
xiii. 29;
- provides a home for the captives of Antioch, II.
xiv. 1 ff.;
- called in by the Lazi, II.
xv. 1,
xv. 12 ff.;
- prepares to invade Lazica, II.
xv. 31-35;
- Belisarius sent against him, II.
xiv. 8;
- invades Lazica, II.
xvii. 1 ff.;
- commands an attack to be made on Petra, II.
xvii. 4;
- impales Aniabedes, II.
xvii. 11;
- besieges Petra, II.
xvii. 13 ff.;
- captures Petra, II.
xvii. 27;
- retires from Lazica, II.
xix. 48;
- third invasion of Roman territory, II.
xx. 1 ff.;
- besieges Sergiopolis in vain, II.
xx. 11 ff.;
- punishes Candidus, the priest of Sergiopolis, II.
xx. 2 ff.,
xx. 15,
xx. 16;
- takes much treasure from Sergiopolis, II.
xx. 7;
- sends envoy to Belisarius, II.
xxi. 1,
xxi. 23;
- retires before Belisarius, II.
xxi. 15 ff.;
- crosses the Euphrates by a bridge, II.
xxi. 21;
- takes Callinicus, II.
xi. 28,
xxi. 30-32;
- receives the hostage John, II.
xxi. 27;
- awaits the Roman envoys at Adarbiganon, II.
xxiv. 1 ff.;
- his army visited by the pestilence, II.
xxiv. 8,
xxiv. 12;
- retires from Adarbiganon into Assyria, II.
xxiv. 12;
- fourth invasion of Roman territory, II.
xxvi. 1 ff.;
- makes an attempt upon Edessa, II.
xxvi. 5 ff.;
- comes to terms with the citizens of Edessa, II.
xxvii. 46;
- arranges a five-year truce with Constantianus and Sergius, II.
xxviii. 7 ff.;
- lays plans to capture Daras and secure his possession of Lazica, II.
xxviii. 15 ff.;
- attemps to capture Daras by a ruse, II.
xxviii. 31 ff.;
- plans to build a fleet in the Euxine, II.
xxix. 1;
- sends Phabrizus into Lazica to destroy Goubazes, II.
xxix. 2 ff.;
- sends an army to relieve Petra, II.
xxix. 13
- Christ, suffered in Jerusalem, II.
xi. 14.
- See "Jesus."
- Christians, converted two temples into churches, I.
xvii. 18;
- boast that Edessa cannot be captured, II.
xii. 7;
- reverence especially the feast of Easter, I. xviii.15;
- the Lazi and Iberians devout Christians, I.
xii. 3, II.
xxviii. 26;
- among the Homeritae, abused by Jews, I.
xx. 1
- Cilicia, the refuge of Ephraemius, II.
vii. 17;
- and Germanus, II.
vii. 18
- Cilicians, the objective of Chosroes' invasion, II.
v. 4,
vi. 21
- Cilician screens, used at the siege of Edessa, II.
xxvi. 29
- Circesium, Roman stronghold on the Euphrates, II.
v. 2;
- its excellent defences, II.
v. 3
- Citharizon, fortress in Armenia, four days from Theodosiopolis, II.
xxiv. 13
- Colchis, the old name for Lazica (q.v.) I.
xi. 28, etc.
- Comana, called "Golden Comana," a city of Cappadocia founded by Orestes, I.
xvii. 19
- Comana, city in Pontus, founded by Orestes, not the one "Among the Taurians," I.
xvii. 12
- Comet, The, its appearance in the heavens, II.
iv. 1,
iv. 2;
- various explanations of the meaning of the phenomenon, II.
iv. 3
- Commagene, old name for Euphratesia, I.
xvii. 2,
xvii. 23, II.
xx. 17;
- invaded by the Persians, I.
xviii. 2
- Constantianus, an Illyrian, II.
xxiv. 4;
- envoy to Chosroes with Sergius, II.
xxiv. 3;
- appointed general, II.
xxviii. 2;
- sent as envoy to Chosroes with Sergius a second time, II.
xxviii. 3 ff.
- Constantina, city in Mesopotamia, I.
xxii. 3;
- distance from Arzamon, I.
viii. 10;
- Cabades desirous of capturing the city, II.
xiii. 8;
- spared by Cabades owing to the entreaties of Baradotus, II.
xiii. 13 ff.;
- claimed by Chosroes as an inherited possession, II.
xiii. 8,
xiii. 15;
- citizens of, their offer of money accepted by Chosroes, II.
xiii. 8
- Constantine, Forum of, in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 9,
xxiv. 24
- Coutzes, Roman general, brother of Bouzes, sent to support Belisarius at Mindouos, I.
xiii. 5;
- captured by the Persians, I.
xiii. 8
- Ctesiphon, town on the Tigris, II.
xxviii. 4-5;
- distance from the Antioch of Chosroes, II.
xiv. 1
- Cyril, Roman commander at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 21
- Cyrus, king of the Persians, II.
ii. 15
- Cyzicus, John the Cappadocian exiled thither, I.
xxv. 31
-
Dagaris, a Roman spy, captured by Huns, I.
xv. 6;
- returned to the Romans, I.
xxii. 18;
- his later services to the Romans, I.
xxii. 19
- Dagisthaeus, commands an army to succour the Lazi, II.
xxix. 10;
- with Goubazes besieges Petra, II.
xxix. 11 ff.;
- sends an insufficient force to guard the pass into Lazica, II.
xxix. 33-34;
- his incompetent conduct of the siege of Petra, II.
xxix. 34 ff.;
- deceived by Mirranes, II.
xxx. 7;
- abandons Petra, II.
xxx. 11;
- with Phoubelis attacks Mermeroes, II.
xxx. 22;
- with Goubazes attacks and almost annihilates the Persians, II.
xxx. 39 ff.
- Daphne, suburb of Antioch, I.
viii. 25;
- visited by Chosroes, II.
xi. 5 ff.;
- the portent of the uprooted cypresses, II.
xiv. 5
- Daras, a city in Mesopotamia, fortified by Anastasius, I.
x. 13;
- distance from Nisibis and the Persian boundary, I.
x. 14;
- from Ammodius, I.
xiii. 15;
- its formidable defences, II.
xiii. 17;
- a menace to the Persians, I.
xvi. 6;
- battle of, I.
xiii. 12 ff.;
- the Persians demand that its
- walls be demolished, I.
xvi. 7;
- its abandonment by the Roman army a condition of the "endless peace," I.
xxii. 16;
- the tyranny of John, I.
xxvi. 5-12;
- besieged by Chosroes, II.
xi. 28,
xiii. 16 ff.;
- citizens of, make a settlement with Chosroes, II.
xiii. 28;
- Chosroes plans to capture it by a ruse, II.
xxviii. 17;
- failure of the attempt, II.
xxviii. 31 ff.
- Death, Gate of, in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 52
- Diocletian, Roman emperor, readjusts the Roman boundary in Aegypt, I.
xix. 29 ff.;
- builds the fortress of Philae, I.
xix. 34,
xix. 35
- Diogenes, a guardsman, commander of cavalry, II.
xxi. 2,
xxi. 18,
xxi. 20
- Domentiolus commands a detachment of an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 15
- Dorotheus, a Roman commander at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 21
- Dorotheus, general of Armenia, attacks invading Persian army, I.
xv. 3 ff.;
- makes a sally from Satala upon the Persian army, I.
xv. 11 ff.
- Doubios, district in Persarmenia, II.
xxv. 1,
xxv. 2;
- its trade with India, II.
xxv. 3;
- distance from Theodosiopolis, II.
xxv. 1;
- Mermeroes stops there with his army II.
xxx. 33;
- priest of, called Catholicos, II.
xxv. 4;
- sent to urge the Romans to make peace, II.
xxiv. 6,
xxiv. 7
-
Easter, its especial observance by the Christians, I.
xviii. 15
- Edessa, the centre of so-called Osroene, I.
xvii. 24;
- in Mesopotamia, II.
xxiv. 4;
- Augustus promises to build a hippodrome in the city, II.
xii. 18;
- the story of its toparch Augarus, II.
xii. 8 ff.;
- citizens of, convinced that the city could not be captured by barbarians, II.
xii. 7,
xii. 26,
xii. 30;
- the letter of Christ to Augarus inscribed on the city wall, II.
xii. 26;
- given over to the Persians by the son of Augarus, II.
xii. 28;
- citizens of, destroy the Persian guards and give back the city to the Romans, II.
xii. 29;
- citizens pay Chosroes two centenaria, II.
xii. 34;
- their zeal to ransom the captives of Antioch frustrated by Bouzes, II.
xiii. 3 ff.;
- Cabades desirous of capturing the city, II.
xii. 6,
xii. 7, xii. 31,
xiii. 8;
- abandons his purpose upon reaching it, II.
xiii. 9 ff.;
- attacked by Chosroes, II.
xxvi.5 ff.;
- the home of Sergius, II.
xxiv. 4
- Eirenaeus, Roman general, sent to Lazica, I.
xii. 14
- Elephantina, city in Aegypt, on the Roman boundary, I.
xix. 27;
- near Philae, I.
xix. 34,
xix. 35
- Endielon, place near Amida, I.
vii. 5
- Ephraemius, chief priest of Antioch, accused of treason by Julian, II.
vii. 16;
- retires to Cilicia, II.
vii. 17
- Ephthalitae Huns, called White Huns, their manners and customs, I.
iii. 1,
iii. 2;
- wage war with Perozes, I.
iii. 1 ff.;
- entrap the Persian army, I.
iii. 8 ff.;
- in a second war with Perozes completely destroy his army, I.
iv. 1 ff.;
- force the Persians to pay tribute, I.
iv. 35;
- receive Cabades after his escape from the Prison of Oblivion, I.
vi. 10;
- Cabades owes their king money, I.
vii. 1,
vii. 2;
- punished for impiety towards Jacobus, the hermit, I.
vii. 8;
- eight hundred Eph. killed by the Persians, I.
viii. 13
- Eruli, accustomed to fight without protective armour except a shield, II.
xxv. 27,
xxv. 28;
- in the Roman army, II.
xxi. 4;
- in the Roman army at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 19,
xiv. 33,
xiv. 39;
- under Mundus, I.
xxiv. 41;
- in the army of Valerianus, II.
xxiv. 12;
- with the army of Martinus, II.
xxiv. 14;
- follow Peter into Persia, II.
xxiv. 18;
- in the battle of Anglon, II.
xxv. 20 ff.
- Esimiphaeus, established as king of the Homeritae, I.
xx. 1;
- deposed by insurgents, I.
xx. 3;
- makes idle promise to Justinian, I.
xx. 9 ff.
- Euphemia, daughter of John the Cappadocian I.
xxv. 13
- Euphemia, captive of Sura, married by Chosroes, II.
v. 28
- Euphratesia, ancient name of Commagene I.
xvii. 2,
xvii. 23, II.
xx. 17,
xx. 20;
- chosen by Azarethes as the starting point for an invasion of Roman territory, I.
xvii. 2
- Euphrates River, its source in Armenia, I.
xvii. 4;
- disappears in a strange marsh, I.
xvii. 6 ff.;
- its course from Celesene as far as the junction with the Tigris, I.
xvii. 21,
xvii. 22;
- receives the waters of the Aborrhas, II.
v. 1;
- protects one side of Circesium,
ib.;
- important battle on its banks, I.
xviii. 30 ff.
- Europe, invaded by the Huns, II.
iv. 4 ff.
- Europum, on the Euphrates, headquarters of Belisarius while
- recruiting his army, II.
xx. 24,
xx. 27,
xx. 28
- Eusebius, Roman ambassador to the Persian king Perozes, I.
iii. 8;
- warns Perozes of the stratagem of the Ephthalitae I.
iii. 13
- Eusebius, bishop of Cyzicus, murdered by the citizens, I.
xxv. 37,
xxv. 38
- Euxine Sea, receives the waters of the Phasis, II.
xxix. 18;
- Chosroes desires an outlet to it, II.
xxviii. 23
- Evaris, builder of a temple of Michael at Tretum, near Antioch, II.
xi. 7
-
Florentinus, a Thracian, distinguishes himself at the battle of Satala, I.
xv. 15,
xv. 16
-
Gabalas, a Saracen, father of Arethas, I.
xvii. 47
- Galatians, on the Euxine, II.
xxviii. 23
- Gabboulon, distance from Chalcis, I.
xviii. 8
- Gaza, limit of Arabia in olden times, I.
xix. 20
- Gelimer, brought captive to Byzantium by Belisarius, II.
xxi. 28
- George, confidant of Belisarius, persuades the inhabitants of Sisauranon to capitulate, II.
xix. 22, xix. 23;
- saves the city of Daras, II.
xxviii. 33 f.
- Germanus, nephew of Justinian, II.
vi. 9;
- commander at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 21;
- sent to meet the invasion of Chosroes, II.
vi. 9;
- establishes himself In Antioch and inspects the fortifications, II.
vi. 10;
- retires into Cilicia, II.
vii. 18
- Glones, a Persian, in command of the garrison in Amida, I.
vii. 33;
- destroyed by a stratagem, I.
ix. 5-17;
- son of, I.
ix. 4,
ix. 18
- Godidisklus, a Goth, an officer in the Roman army, I.
viii. 3
- Gorgo, city of the Ephthalitae, against the Persian frontier, I.
iii. 2,
iv. 10
- Goths, march with Belisarius against Chosroes, II.
xiv. 10,
xviii. 24,
xxi. 4
- Goubazes, king of Lazica, privy councillor of Justinian in absentia, II.
xxix. 31;
- gives himself and his people over to Chosroes, II.
xvii. 2 ff.;
- plotted against by Phabrizus, II.
xxix. 2 ff.;
- begs Justinian to succour the Lazi, II.
xxix. 9;
- with Dagisthaeus besieges Petra, II.
xxix. 11 ff.;
- defends one pass against the Persians, II.
xxix. 28 ff.;
- asks Justinian to send money to the Alani and the Sabeiri, II.
xxix. 30;
- Chosroes plans to put him out of the way, II.
xxviii. 30,
xxix. 2 ff.;
- rewarded with money by Justinian, II.
xxx. 28;
- with Dagisthaeus attacks and almost annihilates the Persians, II.
xxx. 39 ff.
- Gourgenes, king of Iberia, revolts from the Persians, I.
xii. 4 ff., II.
xv. 6,
xxviii. 20;
- retires before the Persian army into Lazica, I.
xii. 11,
xii. 12
- Gousanastades, "chanaranges," counsels the execution of Cabades, I.
v. 4;
- put to death by Cabades, I.
vi. 18
- Greece, plundered by the Huns, II.
iv. 11
- Greeks, The, I.
xix. 35
- Green Faction, their struggles with the Blue Faction, I.
xxiv. 2-6;
- in the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 7 ff.;
- favoured by Chosroes at Apamea, II.
xi. 32
-
Hebrews, of Iotabe, formerly autonomous, become subject to the Romans, I.
xix. 4
- Helen, palace named from, in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 30
- Hellenic faith, The, I.
xx. 1, xxv. 10
- Hellestheaeus, king of the Aethiopians, his expeditions against the Homeritae, I.
xx. 1 ff.;
- his vain promises to Justinian, I.
xx. 9 ff.
- Hermogenes, Roman general, sent to assist Belisarius, I.
xiii. 10;
- in company with Belisarius prepares to meet the Persians at Daras, I.
xiii. 12 ff.;
- at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 19 ff.;
- forbids Andreas to engage in single combat, I.
xiii. 35;
- interchange of letters with Perozes, I.
xiv. 1 ff.;
- address to the troops, I.
xiv. 20 ff.;
- arrays the army on the second day of the battle of Daras, I.
xiv. 28;
- at the battle of Daras, I.
xiv. 44;
- recalls Romans from pursuit of the Persians, I.
xiv. 53;
- returns to Byzantium, I.
xvi. 10;
- sent as ambassador by the emperor, I.
xviii. 16;
- negotiates unsuccessfully with Chosroes, I.
xxi. 1;
- accompanies the army of Sittas as ambassador, I.
xxi. 10,
xxi. 23;
- ambassador to Chosroes with Rufinus, I.
xxii. 16
- Hestia, i.e. Vesta, identified with the Persian fire-divinity, II.
xxiv. 2
- Hierapolis, city on the Euphrates, I.
xiii. 11,
xvii. 22;
- distance from Beroea and Antioch, II.
vii. 2;
- Bouzes and the Roman army stationed there, II.
vi. 2;
- suggested plan for its defence, II.
vi. 3 ff.;
- deserted by Bouzes, II.
vi. 7,
vi. 8;
- saved from Chosroes by payment of money, II.
vi. 22-24;
- Justus and Bouzes take refuge there, II.
xx. 20
- Homeric bowmen, compared with bowmen of Procopius' time, I.
i. 9-11
- Homeritae, people of Arabia, sought as allies by Justinian, I.
xix. 1, xx. 9 ff.;
- location of their country, I.
xix. 15;
- domestic conflicts and intervention of Hellestheaeus, I.
xx. 1 ff.
- Honorius, Emperor of the West, uncle of Theodosius II, unable to assist him, I.
ii. 4
- Huns, a nomadic people, of ugly countenance, I.
iii. 4;
- their homes, I.
x. 6,
xii. 7, II.
xv. 3,
xxviii. 22;
- their war with Cabades, I.
viii. 19,
ix. 24,
x. 15, II.
xvi. 3;
- Justinian attempts to win their support, II.
i. 14,
iii. 47, x. 16;
- capture a Roman spy I.
xv. 6;
- attack of, feared by the Persians at Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 27;
- invade Roman territory, I.
xxi. 28;
- often defeated by Dagaris, I.
xxii. 19;
- receiving annual payments from the Romans, II.
x. 23;
- held back by the Lazi, II.
xv. 3;
- in the army of Chosroes, II.
xxvi. 5;
- assist the Romans in the defence of Edessa, II.
xxvi. 25,
xxvi. 26;
- invade Europe, II.
iv. 4 ff.;
- cross the Hellespont into Asia, II.
iv. 9;
- plunder Illyricum and Thessaly and Greece as far as the Isthmus, II.
iv. 10-12
- Hypatius, nephew of Anastasius, I.
viii. 2;
- his army routed by Cabades, I.
viii. 10-18;
- his escape, I.
viii. 19;
- sent as envoy to the Persians, I.
xi. 24;
- slandered by Rufinus, I.
xi. 38;
- his punishment, I.
xi. 39;
- sent from the palace by Justinian, I.
xxiv. 19-21;
- declared emperor by the populace, and conducted to the hippodrome, I.
xxiv. 22 f.;
- his wife Mary, I.
xxiv. 23;
- takes the emperor's seat in the hippodrome, I.
xxiv. 42;
- brought before Justinian as a prisoner, I.
xxiv. 53;
- meets his death bravely, I.
xxiv. 55,
xxiv. 56
-
Iberia, Iberians, a Christian people, side with the Romans, I.
xii. 2 ff., II.
xv. 6;
- come to Byzantium, I.
xii. 14;
- given choice of remaining in Byzantium or returning to their homes, I.
xxii. 16;
- dissatisfied with Persian rule, II.
xxviii. 20,
xxviii. 21
- Ildiger, in the army of Martinus, II.
xxiv. 13
- Illyricum, invaded by the Huns, II.
iv. 5,
iv. 10
- Immortals, a detachment of the Persian army, I.
xiv. 31;
- at the battle of Daras, I.
xiv. 44 ff.
- India, washed by the "Red Sea," I.
xix. 3;
- boats in, tale to account for their construction without iron, I.
xix. 23,
xix. 24;
- iron not produced there nor imported from elsewhere, I.
xix. 24-26;
- silk export, I.
xx. 9,
xx. 12;
- its trade with Doubios, II.
xxv. 3
- Ionian Gulf, II.
iv. 4
- Iotabe, an Island In the "Red Sea," I.
xix. 3
- Iphigenia, the story of her flight from the sanctuary of Artemis, I.
xvii. 11 ff.;
- temple dedicated to her by Orestes, I.
xvii. 18
- Iris River, in Pontus, I.
xvii. 14
- Isaac, brother of Narses, betrays Bolum to the Romans and comes as a deserter to Byzantium, I.
xv. 32,
xv. 33;
- commander in Armenia, II.
xxiv. 14;
- carries his brother Narses out of the battle of Anglon, II.
xxv. 24
- Isaurians, in the Roman army, I.
xviii. 5;
- commanded by Longinus and Stephanacius, I.
xviii. 7;
- at the battle on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 38;
- their inexperience in war, I.
xviii. 39
- Isdigerdes, Persian king, guardian of Theodosius I.
ii. 7 ff.
- Isdigousnas, high Persian official, II.
xxviii. 16;
- employed by Chosroes for the furtherance of his plans, II.
xxviii. 17;
- attempts to capture Daras for Chosroes by a ruse, II.
xxviii. 31 ff.;
- continues to Byzantium as an envoy, II.
xxviii. 38 ff.
- Isis, worshipped by the Blemyes and Nobatae, I.
xix. 35
- Italy, subdued by Belisarius, II.
i. 1
-
Jacobus, a holy man among the Syrians, I.
vii. 5 ff.
- Jason, the tale of his adventure with Medea in Colchis, II.
xvii. 2
- Jerusalem, the scene of Christ's suffering, II.
xi. 14;
- its treasures desired by Chosroes, II.
xx. 18
- Jesus, his life and work in Palestine, II.
xii. 22,
xii. 23;
- invited by Augarus to come to Edessa, II.
xii. 24;
- his reply, in which he promises health to Augarus, II.
xii. 25.
- See also "Christ."
- Jews, oppress the Christians among the Homeritae, I.
xx. 1.
- See also "Hebrews."
- John, father of Artabanes, of the Arsacidae, II.
iii. 25;
- treacherously slain by Bouzes, II.
iii. 29-31
- John, son of Basilius, a notable of Edessa, given as a hostage to Chosroes, I.
xxi. 27,
xxi. 33
- John, an Armenian, son of Thomas Gouzes, in the Roman army, II.
xxx. 4
- John the Cappadocian, praetorian prefect, I.
xxiv. 11;
- his character and ability, I.
xxiv. 12-15,
xxv. 8-10;
- highly esteemed by Justinian, I.
xxv. 5,
xxv. 25,
xxv. 33;
- dismissed from office, I.
xxiv. 17;
- restored to office, I.
xxv. 1;
- hated by Theodora, I.
xxv. 4-7;
- hostility to Belisarius, I.
xxv. 12;
- entrapped by Antonina, I.
xxv. 13 ff.;
- forced to become a priest and exiled to Cyzicus, I.
xxv. 31;
- looks forward confidently to becoming emperor, I.
xxv. 8,
xxv. 19,
xxv. 44, II.
xxx. 50;
- his easy lot in Cyzicus, I.
xxv. 34,
xxv. 35;
- accused of the murder of Eusebius, I.
xxv. 39;
- his treatment at the trial, I.
xxv. 40;
- his punishment, I.
xxv. 42,
xxv. 43;
- imprisoned in the city of Antinous in Aegypt, I.
xxv. 43;
- returns to Byzantium, II.
xxx. 49,
xxx. 50;
- the grotesque fulfilment of his dreams, II.
xxx. 54;
- his daughter Euphemia, I.
xxv. 13
- John, son of Lucas, Roman officer, captured by Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 43,
xvii. 44
- John, commander of troops in Mesopotamia, arrests the interpreter of Vittigis' envoys, II.
xiv. 12;
- attacked by the Persians before Nisibis, II.
xviii. 16
- John, son of Nicetas, Roman commander at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 21;
- urges Belisarius to retire from Mesopotamia, II.
xix. 36 ff.;
- commands a detachment of an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 15
- John, son of Rufinus, sent as ambassador to Chosroes, II.
vii. 15,
ix. 1, x. 10,
x. 18 ff.
- John Tzibus, governor of Lazica,
- his origin and character, II.
xv. 9;
- persuades Justinian to build Petra, II.
xv. 10;
- monopolises the retail trade, II.
xv. 11,
xxix. 21;
- valiantly defends Petra, II.
xvii. 5 ff.;
- killed by a missile, II.
xvii. 16
- John, serving in the Roman infantry, his tyranny at Daras, I.
xxvi. 5-12;
- his death, I.
xxvi. 12
- John the Glutton, a guardsman, sent with Arethas into Assyria, II.
xix. 15 ff.;
- commands a detachment in an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 15
- Julian, sanctuary of, in Antioch, II.
x. 8
- Julian, brother of Summas, envoy to the Aethiopians and Homeritae, I.
xx. 9, II.
i. 10;
- private secretary of Justinian, sent as ambassador to Chosroes, II.
vii. 15;
- forbids giving money to Chosroes and denounces Ephraemius, II.
vii. 16
- Justinian, nephew of Justinus, I.
xi. 10;
- his great love for his wife Theodora, I.
xxv. 4;
- favours adoption of Chosroes by his uncle Justinus, I.
xi. 10;
- as general, I.
xi. 16,
xii. 21;
- becomes emperor upon the death of Justinus, I.
xiii. 1;
- orders the building of a fort in Mindouos, I.
xiii. 2;
- appoints Belisarius General of the East, I.
xiii. 9;
- makes Arethas commander of many tribes, I.
xvii. 47;
- pits Arethas against Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 47,
xvii. 48;
- orders demolition of Philae, I.
xix. 36;
- endeavours to secure the alliance of the Aethiopians and Homeritae, I.
xix. 1, xx. 9 ff.;
- receives the Palm Groves as a present from Abochorabus, I.
xix. 10 ff.;
- recalls Belisarius and sends Sittas to the East, I.
xxi. 2,
xxi. 3;
- receives information from a Persian spy, I.
xxi. 13;
- concludes the "endless peace," I.
xxii. 16;
- receives in Byzantium the Cabades who claimed to be the son of Zames, I.
xxiii. 24;
- his conduct during the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 10 ff.;
- his affection for John the Cappadocian, I.
xxv. 5,
xxv. 25,
xxv. 33;
- denounced by the Armenian embassy before Chosroes, II.
iii. 37 ff.;
- refuses to sanction treaty, II.
xiii. 29;
- summons Belisarius from Italy and sends him against Chosroes, II.
xiv. 8;
- commands Belisarius to invade Persia, II.
xvi. 5;
- sends him again against Chosroes, II.
xx. 20;
- summons Belisarius from the East in order to send him to Italy, II.
xxi. 34;
- takes measures for the relief of the victims of the pestilence, II.
xxiii. 5 ff.;
- attacked by the pestilence, II.
xxiii. 20;
- orders Valerianus and Martinus with others to invade Persia, II.
xxiv.10;
- appoints Marcellus and Constantianus generals, II.
xxviii. 2;
- sanctions the five-year peace, II.
xxviii. 11;
- receives Isdigousnas with especial honour, II.
xxviii. 38 ff.;
- sends succour to the Lazi, II.
xxix. 10;
- neglects to send money requested by Goubazes, II.
xxix. 30-32;
- finally sends the money for the Sabeiri, and gifts of money to Goubazes, II.
xxx. 28;
- sends John Tzibus to Lazica, II.
xv. 9;
- founds Petra in Lazica, II.
xv. 10,
xxix. 20;
- makes a present of money to Chosroes, I.
xxvi. 4;
- considers the question of Strata, II.
i. 7 ff.;
- accused of tampering with Alamoundaras, II.
i. 12-14,
iii. 47,
x. 16;
- advises Chosroes not to wage war, II.
iv. 17 ff.;
- sends Germanus to Syria, II.
vi. 9;
- sends ambassadors to Chosroes, II.
vii. 15;
- favours the Green Faction, II.
xi. 32;
- writes to Chosroes, II.
xiii. 1;
- the years of his reign noted, I.
xvi. 10,
xxii. 17, II.
iii. 56,
v. 1,
xxviii. 11,
xxx. 48
- Justinus, uncle of Justinian, I.
xi. 10;
- an officer in the Roman army, I.
viii. 3;
- becomes emperor, I.
xi. 1;
- declines to adopt Chosroes, I.
xi. 6 ff.;
- reduces Hypatius from authority, I.
xi. 39;
- captures Peter of Arzanene during Celer's invasion, II.
xv. 7;
- supports the Iberians in their revolt from the Persians, I.
xii. 5 ff.;
- makes Justinian partner in the royal power, I.
xii. 21;
- appoints Procopius adviser to Belisarius, I.
xii. 24;
- his death, I.
xiii. 1
- Justus, nephew of Justinian, assists in making Hypatius prisoner, I.
xxiv. 53;
- takes refuge with Bouzes in Hierapolis II.
xx. 20;
- they invite Belisarius to join them, II.
xx. 21 ff.;
- but later come to him in Europum, II.
xx. 28;
- commands a detachment of an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 15;
- invades Persia apart from the other commanders, II.
xxiv. 20;
- invades the country about Taraunon with Peranius, II.
xxv. 35;
- his death, II.
xxviii. 1
-
Lazica, Lazi, later names for Colchis and Colchi (q.v.), I.
xi. 28;
- its cities, II.
xxix. 18;
- an unproductive country, I.
xii. 17 II.
xxviii. 27;
- imported salt and other necessities of life, II.
xv. 5, xxviii. 27;
- many fortresses there, II.
xxx. 27;
- difficult to traverse, II.
xxix. 24,
xxix. 25;
- bulwark against the barbarians of the Caucasus, II.
xxviii. 22;
- its importance to Persia, II.
xxviii. 18 ff.;
- the scene of the story of Jason and Medea, II.
xvii. 2;
- the Lazi in ancient times allies of the Persians, II.
xv. 15;
- become allies of the Romans, II.
xv. 16;
- the people Christian, II.
xxviii. 26;
- Lazica claimed by the Persians, I.
xi. 28;
- forts of, abandoned by the Romans and occupied by the Persians, I.
xii. 19;
- Chosroes refuses to return them to the Romans, I.
xxii. 3;
- finally given up by the Persians, I.
xxii. 18;
- invaded by Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 12, II.
xv. 1,
xvii. 1 ff.;
- limited subjection of the Lazi to the Romans, II.
xv. 2-4;
- placed under a Roman magistrate, II.
iii. 39;
- become discontented by reason of Roman misrule, II.
xv. 6 ff.;
- appeal to Chosroes, II.
xv. 1,
xv. 12 ff.;
- demanded from Chosroes by the Roman envoys, II.
xxviii. 6;
- Chosroes plans to populate it with Persians, II.
xxviii. 17;
- Lazi hostile to Persian rule, II.
xxviii. 25
- Lebanon, I.
xiii. 5, II.
viii. 2,
xvi. 17,
xix. 33
- Libelarius of Thrace, Roman general, invades Mesopotamia, I.
xii. 23;
- reduced from office, I.
xii. 24
- Libyans, II.
iii. 42
- Ligurians, envoys of Vittigis to Chosroes, II.
ii. 1
- Longinus, commander of Isaurians, I.
xviii. 7
- Lucas, father of John, I.
xvii. 44
- Lycaones, in the army of Belisarius, I.
xviii. 40
-
Macedonians, founders of Seleucia and Ctesiphon, II.
xxviii. 4
- Maddeni, tribe of Saracens in Arabia, subject to the Homeritae, I.
xix. 14,
xx. 9
- Magi, advise Perozes to deceive the Ephthalitae, I.
iii. 18 ff.;
- entrap Arsaces, I.
v. 19 ff.;
- advice to Cabades at the siege of Amida, I.
vii. 19;
- announce to Chosroes that he will capture Sura, II.
v. 9;
- answer Cabades' enquiry with regard to Edessa, II.
xiii. 9,
xiii. 10;
- guardians of the fire-sanctuary, II.
xxiv. 2
- Mamas, priest of Daras, assists in overthrowing the tyranny of John, I.
xxvi. 8
- Marcellus, nephew of Justinian, appointed general, II.
xxviii,. 2
- Marcellus, Roman commander at the battle of Daras I.
xiii. 21;
- commander of palace guards, sent by Theodora to assassinate John the Cappadocian, I.
xxv. 24 ff.;
- wounded in the encounter, I.
xxv. 29
- Martinus, given as a hostage to the Persians, I.
xxi. 27;
- sent to the East, II.
xiv. 9;
- defends Daras against Chosroes, II.
xiii. 16 ff.;
- ordered to invade Persia with Valerianus, II.
xxiv. 10;
- General of the East, encamps at Citharizon, II.
xxiv. 13;
- follows Peter in invading Persia, II.
xxiv. 19;
- commands the centre at the battle of Anglon II.
xxv. 17;
- with Peter and Peranius defends Edessa against Chosroes, II.
xxvi. 25 ff.;
- deceived by the Persian commanders, II.
xxvi. 44 ff.,
xxvii. 5,
xxvii. 6;
- arranges a settlement with Chosroes, II.
xxvii. 45,
xxvii. 46
- Martyropolis, near the River Nymphius, I.
viii. 22;
- distance from Amida, I.
xxi. 6;
- besieged by the Persians, I.
xxi. 5 ff.;
- fears
- of Sittas and Hermogenes concerning
- its safety, I.
xxi. 23;
- siege abandoned by the Persians, I.
xxi. 27;
- near Phison, II.
xxiv. 15
- Mary, wife of Hypatius, tries to prevent her husband from going to the hippodrome, I.
xxiv. 23,
xxiv. 24
- Massagetae, reported to be preparing to join the Persians, I.
xxi.13.
- See also"Huns"
- Mebodes, a Persian official, sent as envoy to the Romans, I.
xi. 25;
- slanders Seoses, I.
xi. 31;
- persuades Cabades to leave a written declaration concerning Chosroes, I.
xxi. 17-19;
- opposes the claim of Caoses, I.
xxi. 20;
- secures the election of Chosroes as king, I.
xxi. 22;
- his tragic death, I.
xxiii. 25 ff.
- Medea, the tale of her adventure with Jason in Colchis, II.
xvii. 2
- Medes, the name used by Procopius as an equivalent for "Persians" (q.v.)
- Medic garments, called to Procopius' time "seric," I.
xx. 9
- Megas, bishop of Beroea, sent to Chosroes, II.
vi. 17;
- begs him to spare the Roman cities, II.
vi. 18 ff.;
- goes to Antioch, II.
vii. 1;
- fails to persuade the citizens of Antioch to pay money to Chosroes, II.
vii. 14;
- his conference with Chosroes at Beroea, II.
vii. 19 ff.
- Melitene, chief city of Armenia Minor, I.
xvii. 22
- Mermeroes, Persian general, invades Roman Armenia, I.
xv. 1 ff.;
- driven back by Dorotheus and Sittas, I.
xv. 8;
- invades Roman territory a second time, I.
xv. 9;
- defeated at Satala, I.
xv. 12 ff.;
- shares command of an invading army, I.
xxi. 4;
- lends an army to the relief of Petra, II.
xxix. 13,
xxx. 1 ff.;
- forces the pass into Iberia, II.
xxx. 8-10;
- reaches Petra, II.
xxx. 15;
- taunts the Romans, II.
xxx. 17;
- leaving a garrison in Petra, starts back, II.
xxx. 20;
- attacked by Phoubelis and Goubazes, II.
xxx. 22;
- departs from Lazica with the greater part of his army, II.
xxx. 32,
xxx. 33
- Mesopotamia, bounded by the Tigris and the Euphrates, I.
xvii. 23;
- its hot climate, II.
xix. 31;
- Persians accustomed to invade Roman territory from here, I.
xvii. 25;
- avoided by invading Persian army, I.
xvii. 2;
- invaded by the Persians, I.
xxi. 4 ff.
- Michael, sanctuary of, in Daphne, burned by Chosroes, II.
xi. 6,
xi. 12,
xi. 13;
- temple of, at Tretum, II.
xi. 7,
xi. 13
- Mindouos, place near the Persian border, Justinian attempts to fortify it, I.
xiii. 2,
xvi. 7
- Mirranes, a Persian term (lit. "Mithra-son," denoting properly,
- not an office, but a patrician family); see Perozes 2;
- also, commander in Petra, deceives Dagisthaeus, II.
xxx. 7
- Mocheresis, important city of Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Molatzes, commander of troops in Lebanon, brings succour to Antioch, II.
viii. 2;
- flees precipitately with the soldiers, II.
viii. 17-19
- Monks, distinguished for piety, I.
vii. 22,
vii. 24
- Moors, II.
ii. 8,
iii. 46
- Mopsuestia, a city of Cilicia, II.
x. 2
- Mundus, general in Illyricum, assists in quelling the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 40 ff.
-
Nabedes, commander of the Persian soldiers in Nisibis, II.
xviii. 9;
- attacks the Roman troops before the city, II.
xviii. 19 ff.;
- general in Persarmenia, takes measures to urge the Romans toward making peace, II.
xxiv. 6;
- takes up his position in Anglon, II.
xxv. 6;
- defeats the Roman armies, II.
xxv. 20 ff.
- Narses, a Persarmenian, the emperor's steward, receives Narses and Aratius when they desert to the Romans, I.
xv. 31;
- a eunuch, I.
xxv. 24;
- sent by Theodora to assist in the assassination of John the Cappadocian,
ib.;
- overhears his conversation with Antonina, I.
xxv. 26
- Narses, a Persarmenian, in company with Aratius defeats Sittas and Belisarius, I.
xii. 21,
xii. 22;
- deserts to the Romans, I.
xv. 31;
- dismantles the sanctuaries in Philae at Justinian's order, I.
xix. 37;
- encamps with Valerianus near Theodosiopolis, II.
xxiv. 12;
- leads the attack at Anglon, II.
xxv. 20;
- dies bravely, II.
xxv. 24;
- brother of Isaac, II.
xxiv. 14
- Nicetas, father of the general John, I.
xiii. 21, II.
xix. 36,
xxiv. 15
- Nika insurrection, in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 1 ff.;
- significance of the name, I.
xxiv. 10
- Nile River, the Nobatae dwell along its banks, I.
xix. 28,
xix. 29;
- the island of Philae in it, I.
xix. 34
- Nisibis, distance from the Tigris, I.
xi. 27;
- from Daras, I.
x. 14;
- from Sisauranon, II.
xix. 2;
- bulwark of the Persian empire, II.
xviii. 7;
- its capture by the Persians, I.
xvii. 25;
- its territory invaded by Libelarius, I.
xii. 23;
- by Belisarius, II.
xviii. 1 ff.;
- negotiations with Chosroes there, I.
xxii. 10
- Nobatae, a people of upper Aegypt, I.
xix. 28;
- settled along the Nile by Diocletian, I.
xix. 29 ff.;
- receive annual payment from the Roman emperor, I.
xix. 32,
xix. 33;
- their religion, I.
xix. 35
- Nymphius River, near Martyropolis, I.
viii. 22,
xxi. 6;
- forms boundary between the Roman and Persian territory, I.
xxi. 6;
- boundary of Arzanene, I.
viii. 21, II.
xv. 7
-
Oasis, city in upper Aegypt, former home of the Nobatae, I.
xix. 30
- Obbane, on the Euphrates, distance from Barbalissum, II.
xii. 4
- Octava, place in Armenia, distance from Satala, I.
xv. 9
- Odonathus, ruler of the Saracens, husband of Zenobia, II.
v. 5;
- his services to the Romans, II.
v. 6
- Oenochalakon, place in Armenia, II.
iii. 15
- Olyvrius, emperor of the West, father-in-law of Areobindus, I.
viii. 1
- Orestes, the story of his flight from Tauris, I.
xvii. 11 ff.
- Origenes, a senator, counsels moderation, I.
xxiv. 26 ff.
- Orocasius, highest part of the city of Antioch, II.
vi. 10
- Orontes River, flows along by Antioch, II.
vi. 10,
viii. 3,
viii. 35
- Osiris, worshipped by the Blemyes and Nobatae, I.
xix. 35
- Osroene, name applied to country about Edessa, I.
xvii. 24;
- its strongly fortified cities, I.
xvii. 34
- Osroes, ancient king of Edessa, I.
xvii. 24
-
Pacurius, king of Persia at the time of the truceless war with the Armenians, I.
v. 10;
- entraps Arsaces, I.
v. 16 ff.;
- confines Arsaces in the Prison of Oblivion, I.
v. 29;
- flays Bassicius, I.
v. 28;
- grants favour to a friend of Arsaces, I.
v. 30 ff.
- Palestine, bounded by the "Red Sea," I.
xix. 2;
- Saracens dwelling in it, I.
xix. 10;
- the objective of Chosroes' third invasion, II.
xx. 18;
- visited by the pestilence, II.
xxii. 6
- Palm Groves, held by Saracens of Arabia, I.
xix. 8,
xix. 9, II.
iii. 41;
- presented to Justinian, I.
xix. 10 ff.
- Palmyra, city of Phoenicia, II.
i. 6
- Parthians, their connection with the first Arsaces, II.
iii. 32
- Patriciolus, an officer in the Roman army, I.
viii. 3
- Patricias, the Phrygian, Roman general, I.
viii. 2;
- his army routed by Cabades, I.
viii. 10-18;
- his escape, I.
viii. 19;
- entraps Glones with two hundred Persians, I.
ix. 5-18
- Paulus, interpreter of Chosroes, II.
vi. 22;
- a Roman reared in Antioch, II.
vi. 23;
- presents the Persian demands at Hierapolis, II.
vi. 22;
- at Beroea, II.
vii. 5;
- at Antioch, II.
viii. 4;
- where he exhorts the citizens to abstain from their folly, II.
viii. 7;
- at Chalcis, II.
xii. 1;
- at Edessa, II.
xii. 33;
- a second time at Edessa, II.
xxvi. 14,
xxvii. 24,
xxvii. 45
- Pearl, story of the, I.
iv. 17-31
- Peloponnesus, escapes plunder by the Huns, II.
iv. 11
- Pelusium, in Aegypt, the starting point of the pestilence, II.
xxii. 6
- Peranius, son of Gourgenes, king of Iberia, I.
xii. 11;
- commands a detachment of an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 15;
- invades the country about Taraunon with Justus, II.
xxv. 35;
- with Peter and Martinus defends Edessa against Chosroes, II.
xxvi. 25 ff.,
xxvii. 42;
- Chosroes demands that he and Peter be surrendered to him, II.
xxvi. 38;
- his death, II.
xxviii. 1
- Perozes, Persian king, wages war against the Ephthalitae, I.
iii. 1,
iii. 8;
- entrapped by the Ephthalitae, I.
iii. 10 ff.;
- escapes with his army, I.
iii. 22;
- his second expedition, I.
iv. 1 ff.;
- destroyed with his army by the Ephthalitae, I.
iv. 14 ff.;
- his famous pearl, I.
iv. 14
- Perozes, Persian general, I.
xiii. 16;
- interchange of letters with Belisarius and Hermogenes, I.
xiv. 1 ff.;
- address to his troops, I.
xiv. 13 ff.;
- defeated by Belisarius, I.
xiv. 28 ff.;
- punished by Cabades, I.
xvii. 26 ff.
- Perozes, sons of, murder Symeon, II.
iii. 3
- Persarmenia, its trade with India, II.
xxv. 3;
- devastated by Sittas and Belisarius, I.
xii. 20
- Persarmenians, in the Persian army, I.
xv. 1
- Persians, worship the rising sun, I.
iii. 20;
- their fire-worship, II.
xxiv. 2;
- do not bury the dead, I.
xi. 35,
xii. 4;
- their set character, II.
xxviii. 25;
- their trade in Indian silk, I.
xx. 9;
- the arrogance of their officials, I.
xi. 33;
- their custom of counting an army before and after a campaign, I.
xviii. 52 ff.;
- their infantry inefficient, I.
xiv. 25;
- their bowmen quick, but inferior to those of the Romans, I.
xviii. 32;
- their skill in bridging rivers, II.
xxi. 22;
- maintain spies at public expense, I.
xxi. 11;
- suffer a severe defeat at the hands of the Ephthalitae, I.
iv. 13,
iv. 14;
- pay tribute to the Ephthalitae for two years, I.
iv. 35;
- make peace with Theodosius, I.
ii. 15;
- unable to prevent the fortification of Daras, I.
x. 15;
- capture Amida, I.
vii. 29;
- receive money from the Romans and give back Amida, I.
ix. 4;
- wage war with the Huns during the seven-years' peace with the Romans, I.
ix. 24;
- seize certain forts in Lazica, I.
xii. 19;
- prevent the fortification of Mindouos, I.
xiii. 7,
xiii. 8;
- defeated in battle at Daras, I.
xiv. 47 ff.;
- defeated in Persarmenia, I.
xv. 8;
- and in Armenia, I.
xv. 16;
- refrain from entering Roman territory by Mesopotamia, I.
xvii. 25;
- victorious in the battle on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 37;
- invade Mesopotamia, I.
xxi. 4;
- besiege Martyropolis in vain, I.
xxi. 5 ff.;
- make peace with the Romans, I.
xxii. 17,
xxii. 18;
- capture Sura, II.
v. 25;
- and Beroea, II.
vii. 12 ff.;
- capture and destroy Antioch, II.
viii. 20 ff.;
- capture Petra, II.
xvii. 27;
- besiege Edessa in vain, II.
xxvi. 5 ff.,
xxvii. 46;
- save Petra from capture by the Romans, II.
xxix. 41 ff.;
- suffer a severe defeat in Lazica, II.
xxx. 39 ff.
- Pestilence, The, devastates the whole world, II.
xxii. 1 ff.;
- in Byzantium, II.
xxii. 9 ff.;
- in Persia, II.
xxiv. 8,
xxiv. 12
- Peter, captured as a boy in Arzanene by Justinus, II.
xv. 7;
- Roman general, sent to Lazica, I.
xii. 9;
- summoned to Byzantium, I.
xii. 14;
- bodyguard of Justinian, commander of infantry, I.
xviii. 6;
- at the battle on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 42;
- favours invasion of Persia by Belisarius, II.
xvi. 16;
- attacked by the Persians before Nisibis, II.
xviii. 16 ff.;
- commands a detachment in an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 13;
- precipitately enters Persia, II.
xxiv. 18;
- commands the right wing at the battle of Anglon, II.
xxv. 17;
- with Martinus and Peranius defends Edessa against Chosroes, II.
xxvi. 25 ff.;
- Chosroes demands that he and Peranius be surrendered to him, II.
xxvi. 38;
- his base character and misrule in Lazica, II.
xv. 6-8
- Petra, built by Justinian in Lazica, II.
xv. 10,
xvii. 3,
xxix. 20;
- its impregnable defences, II.
xvii. 18 ff.;
- attacked by the Persians, II.
xvii. 4 ff.;
- besieged by Chosroes, II.
xvii. 13 ff.;
- captured by Chosroes, II.
xvii. 26;
- fortified with a garrison, II.
xix. 48;
- besieged by the Romans and Lazi, II.
xxix. 11 ff.;
- the siege abandoned, II.
xxx. 11;
- valour of the Persian defenders, II.
xxix. 35;
- monopoly established there by John Tzibus, II.
xv. 11,
xxix. 21
- Petrae, ancient capital of the Arabs, I.
xix. 20
- Phabrizus, high Persian official, II.
xxviii. 16;
- employed by Chosroes for the furtherance of his plans, II.
xxviii. 17;
- attempts to destroy Goubazes, II.
xxix. 2 ff.;
- left as commander in Lazica by Mermeroes, II.
xxx. 32;
- his forces almost annihilated by the Lazi, II.
xxx. 42 ff.
- Pharangium, fortress in Persarmenia, occupied by the Romans, I.
xv. 18;
- gold-mines of the Persians there, I.
xv. 27,
xv. 29;
- given over to the Romans, I.
xv. 29, II.
iii. 1;
- its return demanded by Chosroes, I.
xxii. 3;
- given up by the Romans, I.
xxii. 18;
- near the source of the Boas River, II.
xxix. 14
- Pharas, an Erulian chief, at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 19,
xiii. 25 ff.,
xiv. 32,
xiv. 33,
xiv. 39,
- Pharesmanes, of Colchis, an officer
- in the Roman army, I.
viii. 3
- Pharsanses, a man of note in Lazica, II.
xxix. 4;
- his friendship sought by Phabrizus, II.
xxix. 5;
- saves Goubazes, II.
xxix. 7
- Phasis River, its source in the Taurus, I.
xxv. 21;
- its course through Lazica, II.
xxix. 16;
- its size and strong current, II.
xxx. 25,
xxx. 26;
- strongly defended by the Lazi, II.
xxx. 27;
- forded by the Lazi, II.
xxx. 37
- Philae, fortress established by Diocletian on an island in the Nile near Elephantina, I.
xix.34-36;
- its temples dismantled by Justinian, I.
xix. 36,
xix. 37
- Philemouth, an Erulian chief, encamps near Martinus, I.
xxiv. 14;
- with Beros follows Peter into Persia, II.
xxiv. 18
- Phison, place in Armenia near Martyropolis, II.
xxiv. 15
- Phocas, made pretorian prefect in place of John the Cappadocian, I.
xxiv. 18
- Phoenicia, II.
xvi. 17
- Phoubelis, a notable among the Lazi, with Dagisthaeus attacks Mermeroes, II.
xxx. 22
- Pitius, a fortress in Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Pityaxes, Persian general at the battle of Daras, I.
xiii. 16,
xiv. 32,
xiv. 38
- Placillianae, palace In Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 30
- Pompeius, nephew of Anastasius, sent from the palace by Justinian, I.
xxiv. 19-21;
- brought before Justinian as a prisoner, I.
xxiv. 53;
- his death, I.
xxiv. 56
- Pontic Romans, their location, II.
xxix. 19
- Pontus, visited by Orestes, I.
xvii.14
- Potidaea, known in later times as Cassandria, captured by the Huns, II.
iv. 5
- Priapus, worshipped by the Blemyes and Nobatae, I.
xix. 35
- Prison of Oblivion, in Persia, reason for the name, I.
v. 8;
- law regarding it suspended once in the case of Arsaces, I.
v. 9-29;
- Cabades confined therein, I.
v. 7
- Probus, nephew of Anastasius, sent by Justinus to Bosporus to collect an army of Huns, I.
xii. 6,
xii. 9
- Proclus, quaestor, dissuades Justinus from adopting Chosroes, I.
xi. 11 ff.
- Procopius of Caesarea, author of the History of the Wars, I.
i. 1;
- eye-witness of the events described, I.
i. 3;
- chosen adviser to Belisarius, I.
i. 3,
xii. 24;
- in Byzantium at the time of the pestilence, II.
xxii. 9;
- had seen Cappadocia and Armenia, I.
xvii. 17;
- his frankness in writing, I.
i. 5
- Pylades, the story of the flight with Orestes from Tauris, I.
xvii.11 ff.
-
Red Sea, its location, extent, harbours, etc. (confused by Procopius with the Arabian Gulf), I.
xix. 2 ff., II.
iii. 41
- Rhecinarius, envoy to Chosroes, II.
xxvii. 24,
xxvii. 25
- Rhecithancus, of Thrace, commander of troops in Lebanon, objects to invading Persia with Belisarius, II.
xvi. 17 ff.;
- eager to return to Lebanon, II.
xix. 33,
xix. 34;
- commands an army sent to Lazica, II.
xxx. 29
- Rhizaeum, a city near Lazica, II.
xxix. 22,
xxx. 14
- Rhodopolis, important city of Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Romans, used by Procopius to designate the subjects of the empire of Byzantium, and mentioned constantly throughout;
- lack of discipline in Roman armies, I.
xiv. 14;
- their bowmen more efficient than those of the Persians, I.
xviii. 34;
- maintain spies at public expense, I.
xxi. 11
- Rufinianae, suburb of Byzantium, I.
xxv. 21,
xxv. 23
- Rufinus, son of Silvanus, sent as an envoy to the Persians, I.
xi. 24;
- slanders Hypatius, I.
xi. 38;
- sent as ambassador to Hierapolis, I.
xiii. 11;
- treats with Cabades at Daras, I.
xvi. 1 ff.;
- reports to the emperor I.
xvi. 10;
- meets Chosroes on the Tigris, I.
xxii. 1;
- sent, to Byzantium, I.
xxii. 7;
- false report of his death, I.
xxii. 9;
- persuades Chosroes to give back the money brought by the ambassadors
- and postpone the war, I.
xxii. 13,
xxii. 14;
- slandered to the emperor, I.
xxii. 15;
- sent again as ambassador to Chosroes, I.
xxii. 16;
- brother of Timostratus, I.
xvii. 44;
- father of John, the ambassador, II.
vii. 15
-
Sabeiri Huns, their location, II.
xxix. 15;
- in the Persian army, I.
xv. 1;
- persuaded by Goubazes to form an alliance with him, II.
xxix. 29;
- receive promised money from Justinian, II.
xxx. 28
- Saccice, mother of Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 1
- Samosata, city on the Euphrates, I.
xvii. 22;
- on the boundary of Euphratesia, I.
xvii. 23
- Saracens, experts at plundering, but not at storming cities, II.
xix. 12;
- in Persia, all ruled by Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 45;
- some in alliance with the Romans, I.
xviii. 46;
- their king Odonathus, II.
v. 5;
- of Arabia, ruled by Arethas, I.
xvii. 47;
- receiving annual payments from the Romans, II.
x. 23;
- settled in the Palm Groves, I.
xix. 7,
xix. 8;
- and in Palestine, I.
xix. 10;
- cannibals in Arabia, I.
xix. 15;
- never mentioned in treaties, II.
i. 5;
- observe a religious holiday at the vernal equinox, II.
xvi. 18;
- dispute possession of Strata, II.
i. 6;
- in the army of Chosroes, II.
xxvii. 30;
- in the army of Azarethes, I.
xvii. 1,
xviii. 30;
- with the army of Belisarius, I.
xviii. 7,
xviii. 26,
xviii. 35,
xviii. 36, II.
xvi. 5;
- wage war among themselves, II.
xxviii. 12-14
- Sarapanis, a city of Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Sarus River, in Cappadocia, I.
xvii. 17
- Satala, city in Armenia, its location, I.
xv. 9,
xv. 10;
- battle of, I.
xv. 12 ff.
- Scanda, a city in Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Sebastopolis, a fortress of Lazica, II.
xxix. 18
- Seleucia, city on the Tigris, founded by the Macedonians, I.
xxviii. 4
- Seleucia, distance from Antioch, II.
xi. 1;
- visited by Chosroes,
xi. 1ib.
- Senecius, body-guard of Sittas, given as a hostage to the Persians, I.
xxi. 27
- Seoses, rescues Cabades from the Prison of Oblivion, I.
vi. 4,
vi. 10;
- receives the office of "adrastadaran salanes," I.
v. 18,
v. 19;
- sent as envoy to the Romans, I.
vi. 25;
- slandered by Mebodes and brought to trial, I.
xi. 31 ff.;
- condemned to death, I.
xi 37
- Sergiopolis, city in Mesopotamia, II.
v. 29;
- citizens of, give much treasure to Chosroes, II.
xx. 7;
- saved from capture by Ambrus, II.
xx. 10;
- besieged In vain by Chosroes, II.
xx. 11 ff.
- Sergius, an illustrious saint, II.
v. 29
- Sergius, of Edessa, II.
xxiv. 4;
- envoy to Chosroes with Constantianus, II.
xxiv. 3;
- a second time envoy to Chosroes with Const., II.
xxviii. 3 ff.
- Sestus, city opposite Abydus on the Hellespont, II.
iv. 9
- Silentiarius, a title given to certain officials in the palace at Byzantium, "privy councillors," II.
xxii. 1, II.
xxix. 31
- Silvanus, father of Rufinus, I.
xi_24,
xvi. 4
- Simmas, Massagete chief, in the Roman army, I.
xiii. 21,
xiv. 44
- Siphrios, a fortress, distance from Amida, I.
viii. 10
- Sisauranon, fortress in Mesopotamia, II.
xix. 2;
- attacked by Belisarius, II.
xix. 4;
- capitulates to Belisarius, II.
xix. 23,
xix. 24
- Sittas, Roman general, in company with Belisarius invades Persarmenia, I.
xii. 20,
xii. 21;
- defeated by Narses and Aratius, I.
xii. 22;
- attacks the Persian army invading Armenia, I.
xv. 3 ff.;
- occupies the hills about Satala, I.
xv. 10;
- attacks the Persian army unexpectedly, I.
xv. 12;
- defeats the Tzani in battle and then wins them over by kindness, I.
xv. 24,
xv. 25;
- proceeds to the East, I.
xxi. 3;
- awaits the Persian army at Attachas, I.
xxi. 9;
- opens negotiations with the Persians before Martyropolis, I.
xxi. 23 ff.;
- sent against the Armenians, II.
iii. 8 ff.;
- his death, II.
iii. 25;
- his valour and achievements, II.
iii. 26
- Snail, Gate of the, in the palace in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 43
- Soinian Gate, in the wall of Edessa, II.
xxvii. 41
- Solomon, an Armenian, according to one report slew Sittas, II.
iii. 27
- Sophanene, district in Armenia, I.
xxi. 6
- Sophia, sanctuary of, destroyed by fire to the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 9;
- its treasures guarded by the priest Augustus, II.
xxx. 53
- Stephanacius, commander of Isaurians, I.
xviii. 7
- Stephanus, a physician of note, begs Chosroes to spare Edessa, II.
xxvi. 31 ff.
- Strata, its possession disputed by the Saracens, II.
i. 6;
- meaning of the name, II.
i. 7;
- unproductive, II.
i. 11
- Strategius, guardian of the royal treasures, sent as an envoy by Justinian, II.
i. 9;
- his advice concerning Strata, II.
i. 11
- Summus, father of Julian, commander in Palestine, sent as an envoy by Justinian, II.
i. 9,
i. 10;
- his advice concerning Strata, II.
i. 11
- Sunicas, Massagete chief, in the Roman army, I.
xiii. 20,
xiv. 39,
xiv. 40,
xiv. 44;
- charges the standard bearer of Baresmanas, I.
xiv. 47;
- kills Baresmanas, I.
xiv. 60
- Sunitae, march in the Persian army, I.
xv. 1
- Sura, a city on the Euphrates, I.
xviii. 14, II.
v. 8;
- distance from Sergiopolis, II.
v. 29;
- besieged by Chosroes, II.
v. 10 ff.;
- bishop of, begs Chosroes to spare the city, II.
v. 13 ff.;
- captured by a stratagem and destroyed, II.
v. 22 ff.;
- a woman of, made captive by a barbarian in sight of Chosroes, II.
ix. 9,
ix. 10
- Sycae, a suburb of Byzantium, modern "Galata," II.
xxiii. 9
- Symeon, Sanctuary of, at Amida, burned, I.
ix. 18
- Symeon, manager of the Persian gold-mine at Pharangium, I.
xv. 27;
- goes over to the Romans, I.
xv. 28,
xv. 29;
- presented with certain Armenian villages, II.
iii. 1;
- murdered by the sons of Perozes, II.
iii. 2;
- uncle of Amazaspes, II.
iii. 3
- Syria, open to invasion by the Persians, I.
xvii. 34 ff., II.
xvi. 17,
xix. 34;
- attacked by Chosroes, II.
v. 4,
vi. 21
- Syriac tongue, II.
ii. 3
- Taraunon, a district In Persarmenia, invaded by Justus and Peranius, II.
xxv. 35
- Tatianus, of Mopsuestia, quarter-master of the camp in Antioch, witnesses the portent of the standards, II.
x. 2
- Taurians, The, in Celesene, I.
xvii. 11 ff.,
xvii. 21
- Taurus Mountains, The, their size and extent, I.
x. 1,
x. 2,
xv. 20,
xvii. 17
- Theoctistus, commander of troops in Lebanon, brings succour to Antioch, II.
viii. 2;
- flees precipitately with the soldiers, II.
viii. 17-19;
- objects to invading Persia with Belisarius, II.
xvi. 17 ff.;
- eager to return to Lebanon, II.
xix. 33,
xix. 34;
- commands a detachment in an army to invade Persia, II.
xxiv. 13
- Theodoric, leader of the Goths, I.
viii. 3
- Theodora, wife of Justinian, greatly beloved by him, I.
xxv. 4;
- her hatred of John the Cappadocian,
ib.;
- counsels firmness in dealing with the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 33 ff.;
- encourages Antonina in her plan to entrap John the Cappadocian, I.
xxv. 22;
- succeeds in punishing him, I.
xxv. 30;
- her death, II.
xxx. 49
- Theodoras, a citizen of Daras, skilled in mechanics, II.
xiii. 26
- Theodorus, an official in the palace in Byzantium, superintends the work of providing burial for the victims of the pestilence, II.
xxiii. 6 ff.
- Theodosiopolis, its location, I.
x. 18,
xv. 2, II.
xxiv. 12;
- near the sources of the Euphrates and Tigris, I.
xvii. 4;
- fortified by Anastasius, I.
x. 19;
- near Bolum, I.
xv. 32;
- distance from Doubios, II.
xxv. 1;
- from Citharizon, II.
xxiv. 13
- Theodosiopolis, city near the Aborrhas River, II.
xix. 29
- Theodosius II., son of Arcadius, as a child is made the ward of the Persian king Isdigerdes, I.
ii. 1 ff.;
- sends Anatolius as envoy to the Persians, I.
ii. 12;
- makes peace with the Persians, I.
ii. 15;
- Arsaces' abdication of the kingship of Armenia in his favour, II.
iii. 35
- Thermopylae, attacked by the Huns, II.
iv. 10
- Thessaly, plundered by the Huns, II.
iv. 10
- Thilasamon, village near Amida, I.
ix. 14
- Thomas, chief priest of Apamea, displays the wood of the cross, II.
xi. 16 ff.;
- goes before Chosroes, II.
xi. 20 ff.;
- saves the wood of the cross, II.
xi. 29,
xi. 30
- Thomas, ambassador to the Persians, meets Chosroes on the Tigris, I.
xxii. 1
- Thomas Gouzes, commander in Lazica, II.
xxx. 5
- Thrace, Thracians in the army of Belisarius, II.
xix. 32,
xxi. 4;
- home of Coutzes and Bouzes, I.
xiii. 5
- Timostratus, brother of Rufinus, Roman officer, captured by Alamoundaras, I.
xvii. 43,
xvii. 44
- Tigris River, its source in Armenia, I.
xvii. 4;
- its course into Assyria, I.
xvii. 5,
xvii. 6;
- distance from Nisibis, I.
xi. 27;
- its junction with the Euphrates, I.
xvii. 22;
- flows between Seleucia and Ctesiphon, II.
xxviii. 5
- Trajan, a guardsman, sent with Arethas into Assyria, II.
xix. 15 ff.;
- they return by another route, II.
xix. 28 ff.
- Trapezus, city on the Euxine, II.
xxix. 22,
xxx. 14
- Tretum, a place near Antioch where was a temple of Michael, II.
xi. 7
- Tribunianus, a Pamphylian, quaestor, I.
xxiv. 11;
- his dexterity in manipulating laws, I.
xxiv. 16;
- dismissed from office, I.
xxiv. 17;
- restored to office, I.
xxv. 1,
xxv. 2;
- his death, I.
xxv. 2
- Tribunus, a physician, beloved by Chosroes, II.
xxviii. 8 ff.
- Tripod, before the palace of the Persian king, where all must sit who fell under the king's displeasure, I.
xxiii. 28
- Tripurgia, a place at Edessa, II.
xxvii. 41
- Tzani, called Sani in early times, I.
xv. 21;
- the source of the Boas River among them, II.
xxix. 14;
- conquered by the Romans, I.
xv. 19 ff.;
- become Christian, I.
xv. 25;
- reduced to subjection, II.
iii. 39;
- with the Roman army at Petra, II.
xxix. 10,
xxix. 41;
- defend the Roman camp, II.
xxx. 13;
- return to their homes, II.
xxx. 14
- Valerianus, appointed general of Armenia, II.
xiv. 8;
- receives Persian envoys, II.
xxiv. 6-8;
- reports to Justinian, II.
xxiv. 9;
- ordered to invade Persia with Martinus, II.
xxiv. 10;
- encamps near Theodosiopolis, II.
xxiv. 12;
- follows Peter in invading Persia, II.
xxiv. 19;
- commands the left wing at the battle of Anglon, II.
xxv. 17
- Vandals, II.
ii. 8,
iii. 46
- Vararanes, Persian king, invades Roman territory, I.
ii. 11 ff.;
- concludes peace with the Romans, I.
ii. 15
- Varizes, title of a Persian general (lit. "victorious," properly a family name), I.
xii. 10
- Varrames, son of Adergoudounbades, shares the secret of the sparing of Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 10;
- reveals to Chosroes the true story, I.
xxiii. 13;
- made chanaranges, I.
xxiii. 22
- Veneti, name of one of the factions, I.
xxiv. 2-6;
- supported by Justinian, II.
xi. 32;
- also called the Blue Faction, ib.
- Venetian Colonnade, The, in Byzantium, I.
xxiv. 49
- Veredi, the government post horses, II.
xx. 20
- Vesta, see Hestia
- Vitalianus, son of Patriciolus, an officer in the Roman army, I.
viii. 3;
- becomes tyrant,
ib.;
- his hostility to Anastasius, I.
xiii. 10;
- his adviser Hermogenes,
ib.
- Vittigis, king of the Goths, sends ambassadors to Chosroes, II.
ii. 1;
- they address Chosroes, II.
ii. 4 ff.;
- brought to Byzantium by Belisarius, II.
iv. 13,
xxi. 28;
- remains in Byzantium, II.
xiv. 10;
- envoys of, one dies, the other remains in Persia, II.
xiv. 11;
- their interpreter captured, II.
xiv. 12
- White Syrians, old name for the inhabitants of Armenia Minor, I.
xvii. 21
- Zaberganes, misrepresents Mebodes to Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 25,
xxiii. 26;
- reproaches Chosroes, II.
viii. 30 ff.;
- at the bidding of Chosroes receives the envoys of Edessa, II.
xxvi. 16-19
- Zames, son of Cabades, disqualified from succeeding his father, I.
xi. 4; II.
ix. 12;
- plot to put him in power in place of Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 4,
xxiii. 5;
- slain by Chosroes, I.
xxiii. 6
- Zechi, their location, II.
xxix. 15
- Zeno, Roman emperor at the time of the Persian king Arsaces, I.
iii. 8
- Zenobia, city on the Euphrates, II.
v. 4;
- founded by Zenobia, II.
v. 5;
- Chosroes refrains from attacking it, II.
v. 7
- Zenobia, wife of Odonathus, founder of the city of Zenobia, II.
v. 5
- Zeuxippus, Baths of, destroyed by fire in the Nika insurrection, I.
xxiv. 9