his enemies, by the report of his death. The personal weight of Belisarius, the rank, the spirit, and the
temper, of Germanus, the emperor's nephew, and the vigor and success of the second administration
of the eunuch Solomon, restored the modesty of the camp, and maintained for a while the tranquillity of
Africa. But the vices of the Byzantine court were felt in that distant province; the troops complained that
they were neither paid nor relieved, and as soon as the public disorders were sufficiently mature, Stoza
was again alive, in arms, and at the gates of Carthage. He fell in a single combat, but he smiled in the
agonies of death, when he was informed that his own javelin had reached the heart of his antagonist. *
The example of Stoza, and the assurance that a fortunate soldier had been the first king, encouraged
the ambition of Gontharis, and he promised, by a private treaty, to divide Africa with the Moors, if, with
their dangerous aid, he should ascend the throne of Carthage. The feeble Areobindus, unskilled in the
affairs of peace and war, was raised, by his marriage with the niece of Justinian, to the office of exarch.
He was suddenly oppressed by a sedition of the guards, and his abject supplications, which provoked
the contempt, could not move the pity, of the inexorable tyrant. After a reign of thirty days, Gontharis
himself was stabbed at a banquet by the hand of Artaban; and it is singular enough, that an Armenian
prince, of the royal family of Arsaces, should reestablish at Carthage the authority of the Roman empire.
In the conspiracy which unsheathed the dagger of Brutus against the life of Cæsar, every circumstance is
curious and important to the eyes of posterity; but the guilt or merit of these loyal or rebellious assassins
could interest only the contemporaries of Procopius, who, by their hopes and fears, their friendship or
resentment, were personally engaged in the revolutions of Africa.
That country was rapidly sinking into the state of barbarism from whence it had been raised by the Phnician
colonies and Roman laws; and every step of intestine discord was marked by some deplorable victory of
savage man over civilized society. The Moors, though ignorant of justice, were impatient of oppression: their
vagrant life and boundless wilderness disappointed the arms, and eluded the chains, of a conqueror; and
experience had shown, that neither oaths nor obligations could secure the fidelity of their attachment.
The victory of Mount Auras had awed them into momentary submission; but if they respected the character
of Solomon, they hated and despised the pride and luxury of his two nephews, Cyrus and Sergius, on
whom their uncle had imprudently bestowed the provincial governments of Tripoli and Pentapolis. A
Moorish tribe encamped under the walls of Leptis, to renew their alliance, and receive from the governor
the customary gifts. Fourscore of their deputies were introduced as friends into the city; but on the dark
suspicion of a conspiracy, they were massacred at the table of Sergius, and the clamor of arms and
revenge was reëchoed through the valleys of Mount Atlas from both the Syrtes to the Atlantic Ocean. A
personal injury, the unjust execution or murder of his brother, rendered Antalas the enemy of the Romans.
The defeat of the Vandals had formerly signalized his valor; the rudiments of justice and prudence were
still more conspicuous in a Moor; and while he laid Adrumetum in ashes, he calmly admonished the
emperor that the peace of Africa might be secured by the recall of Solomon and his unworthy nephews.
The exarch led forth his troops from Carthage: but, at the distance of six days' journey, in the neighborhood
of Tebeste, he was astonished by the superior numbers and fierce aspect of the Barbarians. He proposed
a treaty; solicited a reconciliation; and offered to bind himself by the most solemn oaths. "By what oaths
can he bind himself?" interrupted the indignant Moors. "Will he swear by the Gospels, the divine books
of the Christians? It was on those books that the faith of his nephew Sergius was pledged to eighty of
our innocent and unfortunate brethren. Before we trust them a second time, let us try their efficacy in
the chastisement of perjury and the vindication of their own honor." Their honor was vindicated in the
field of Tebeste, by the death of Solomon, and the total loss of his army. * The arrival of fresh troops
and more skilful commanders soon checked the insolence of the Moors: seventeen of their princes were
slain in the same battle; and the doubtful and transient submission of their tribes was celebrated with
lavish applause by the people of Constantinople. Successive inroads had reduced the province of Africa
to one third of the measure of Italy; yet the Roman emperors continued to reign above a century over
Carthage and the fruitful coast of the Mediterranean. But the victories and the losses of Justinian were
alike pernicious to mankind; and such was the desolation of Africa, that in many parts a stranger might
wander whole days without meeting the face either of a friend or an enemy. The nation of the Vandals
had disappeared: they once amounted to a hundred and sixty thousand warriors, without including the
children, the women, or the slaves. Their numbers were infinitely surpassed by the number of the Moorish