within their proper bounds, wholly by the influence of his character,
   all the barbarian kings who occupied the empire; he built towns and
   fortresses between the point of the Adriatic and the Alps, in order,
   with the greater facility, to impede the passage of any new hordes of
   barbarians who might design to assail Italy; and if, toward the latter
   end of his life, so many virtues had not been sullied by acts of
   cruelty, caused by various jealousies of his people, such as the death
   of Symmachus and Boethius, men of great holiness, every point of his
   character would have deserved the highest praise. By his virtue and
   goodness, not only Rome and Italy, but every part of the western
   empire, freed from the continual troubles which they had suffered from
   the frequent influx of barbarians, acquired new vigor, and began to
   live in an orderly and civilized manner. For surely if any times were
   truly miserable for Italy and the provinces overrun by the barbarians,
   they were those which occurred from Arcadius and Honorius to
   Theodoric. If we only consider the evils which arise to a republic or
   a kingdom by a change of prince or of government; not by foreign
   interference, but by civil discord (in which we may see how even
   slight variations suffice to ruin the most powerful kingdoms or
   states), we may then easily imagine how much Italy and the other Roman
   provinces suffered, when they not only changed their forms of
   government and their princes, but also their laws, customs, modes of
   living, religion, language, and name. Any one of such changes, by
   itself, without being united with others, might, with thinking of it,
   to say nothing of the seeing and suffering, infuse terror into the
   strongest minds.
   From these causes proceeded the ruin as well as the origin and
   extension of many cities. Among those which were ruined were Aquileia,
   Luni, Chiusi, Popolonia, Fiesole, and many others. The new cities were
   Venice, Sienna, Ferrara, Aquila, with many towns and castles which for
   brevity we omit. Those which became extended were Florence, Genoa,
   Pisa, Milan, Naples, and Bologna; to all of which may be added, the
   ruin and restoration of Rome, and of many other cities not previously
   mentioned.
   From this devastation and new population arose new languages, as we
   see in the different dialects of France, Spain and Italy; which,
   partaking of the native idiom of the new people and of the old Roman,
   formed a new manner of discourse. Besides, not only were the names of
   provinces changed, but also of lakes, rivers, seas, and men; for
   France, Spain, and Italy are full of fresh names, wholly different
   from the ancient; as, omitting many others, we see that the Po, the
   Garda, the Archipelago, are names quite different from those which the
   ancients used; while instead of C?sar and Pompey we have Peter,
   Matthew, John, etc.
   Among so many variations, that of religion was not of little
   importance; for, while combating the customs of the ancient faith with
   the miracles of the new, very serious troubles and discords were
   created among men. And if the Christians had been united in one faith,
   fewer disorders would have followed; but the contentions among
   themselves, of the churches of Rome, Greece, and Ravenna, joined to
   those of the heretic sects with the Catholics, served in many ways to
   render the world miserable. Africa is a proof of this; having suffered
   more horrors from the Arian sect, whose doctrines were believed by the
   Vandals, than from any avarice or natural cruelty of the people
   themselves. Living amid so many persecutions, the countenances of men
   bore witness of the terrible impressions upon their minds; for besides
   the evils they suffered from the disordered state of the world, they
   scarcely could have recourse to the help of God, in whom the unhappy
   hope for relief; for the greater part of them, being uncertain what
   divinity they ought to address, died miserably, without help and
   without hope.
   Having been the first who put a stop to so many evils, Theodoric
   deserves the highest praise: for during the thirty-eight years he
   reigned in Italy, he brought the country to such a state of greatness
   that her previous sufferings were no longer recognizable. But at his
   death, the kingdom descending to Atalaric, son of Amalasontha, his
   daughter, and the malice of fortune not being yet exhausted, the old
   evils soon returned; for Atalaric died soon after his grandfather, and
   the kingdom coming into the possession of his mother, she was betrayed
   by Theodatus, whom she had called to assist her in the government. He
   put her to death and made himself king; and having thus become odious
   to the Ostrogoths, the emperor Justinian entertained the hope of
   driving him out of Italy. Justinian appointed Belisarius to the
   command of this expedition, as he had already conquered Africa,
   expelled the Vandals, and reduced the country to the imperial rule.
   Belisarius took possession of Sicily, and from thence passing into
   Italy, occupied Naples and Rome. The Goths, seeing this, slew
   Theodatus their king, whom they considered the cause of their
   misfortune, and elected Vitiges in his stead, who, after some
   skirmishes, was besieged and taken by Belisarius at Ravenna; but
   before he had time to secure the advantages of his victory, Belisarius
   was recalled by Justinian, and Joannes and Vitalis were appointed in
   his place. Their principles and practices were so different from those
   of Belisarius, that the Goths took courage and created Ildovadus,
   governor of Verona, their king. After Ildovadus, who was slain, came
   Totila, who routed the imperial forces, took Tuscany and Naples, and
   recovered nearly the whole of what Belisarius had taken from them. On
   this account Justinian determined to send him into Italy again; but,
   coming with only a small force, he lost the reputation which his
   former victories had won for him, in less time than he had taken to
   acquire it. Totila being at Ostia with his forces, took Rome before
   his eyes; but being unable to hold or to leave the city, he destroyed
   the greater part of it, drove out the citizens, and took the senators
   away from him. Thinking little of Belisarius, he led his people into
   Calabria, to attack the forces which had been sent from Greece.
   Belisarius, seeing the city abandoned, turned his mind to the
   performance of an honourable work. Viewing the ruins of Rome, he
   determined to rebuild her walls and recall her inhabitants with as
   little delay as possible. But fortune was opposed to this laudable
   enterprise; for Justinian, being at this time assailed by the
   Parthians, recalled him; and his duty to his sovereign compelled him
   to abandon Italy to Totila, who again took Rome, but did not treat her
   with such severity as upon the former occasion; for at the entreaty of
   St. Benedict, who in those days had great reputation for sanctity, he
   endeavored to restore her. In the meantime, Justinian having arranged
   matters with the Parthians, again thought of sending a force to the
   relief of Italy 
					     					 			; but the Sclavi, another northern people, having
   crossed the Danube and attacked Illyria and Thrace, prevented him, so
   that Totila held almost the whole country. Having conquered the
   Slavonians, Justinian sent Narses, a eunuch, a man of great military
   talent, who, having arrived in Italy, routed and slew Totila. The
   Goths who escaped sought refuge in Pavia, where they created Teias
   their king. On the other hand, Narses after the victory took Rome, and
   coming to an engagement with Teias near Nocera, slew him and routed
   his army. By this victory, the power of the Goths in Italy was quite
   annihilated, after having existed for seventy years, from the coming
   of Theodoric to the death of Teias.
   No sooner was Italy delivered from the Goths than Justinian died, and
   was succeeded by Justin, his son, who, at the instigation of Sophia,
   his wife, recalled Narses, and sent Longinus in his stead. Like those
   who preceded him, he made his abode at Ravenna, and besides this, gave
   a new form to the government of Italy; for he did not appoint
   governors of provinces, as the Goths had done, but in every city and
   town of importance placed a ruler whom he called a duke. Neither in
   this arrangement did he respect Rome more than the other cities; for
   having set aside the consuls and senate, names which up to this time
   had been preserved, he placed her under a duke, who was sent every
   year from Ravenna, and called her the duchy of Rome; while to him who
   remained in Ravenna, and governed the whole of Italy for the emperor,
   was given the name of Exarch. This division of the country greatly
   facilitated the ruin of Italy, and gave the Lombards an early occasion
   of occupying it. Narses was greatly enraged with the emperor, for
   having recalled him from the government of the province, which he had
   won with his own valor and blood; while Sophia, not content with the
   injury done by withdrawing him, treated him in the most offensive
   manner, saying she wished him to come back that he might spin with the
   other eunuchs. Full of indignation, Narses persuaded Alboin, king of
   the Lombards, who then reigned in Pannonia, to invade and take
   possession of Italy.
   The Lombards, as was said before, occupied those places upon the
   Danube which had been vacated by the Eruli and Turingi, when Odoacer
   their king led them into Italy; where, having been established for
   some time, their dominions were held by Alboin, a man ferocious and
   bold, under whom they crossed the Danube, and coming to an engagement
   with Cunimund, king of the Zepidi, who held Pannonia, conquered and
   slew him. Alboin finding Rosamond, daughter of Cunimund, among the
   captives, took her to wife, and made himself sovereign of Pannonia;
   and, moved by his savage nature, caused the skull of Cunimund to be
   formed into a cup, from which, in memory of the victory, he drank.
   Being invited into Italy by Narses, with whom he had been in
   friendship during the war with the Goths, he left Pannonia to the
   Huns, who after the death of Attila had returned to their country.
   Finding, on his arrival, the province divided into so many parts, he
   presently occupied Pavia, Milan, Verona, Vicenza, the whole of
   Tuscany, and the greater part of Flamminia, which is now called
   Romagna. These great and rapid acquisitions made him think the
   conquest of Italy already secured; he therefore gave a great feast at
   Verona, and having become elevated with wine, ordered the skull of
   Cunimund to be filled, and caused it to be presented to the queen
   Rosamond, who sat opposite, saying loud enough for her to hear, that
   upon occasion of such great joy she should drink with her father.
   These words were like a dagger to the lady's bosom and she resolved to
   have revenge. Knowing that Helmichis, a noble Lombard, was in love
   with one of her maids, she arranged with the young woman, that
   Helmichis, without being acquainted with the fact, should sleep with
   her instead of his mistress. Having effected her design, Rosamond
   discovered herself to Helmichis, and gave him the choice either of
   killing Alboin, and taking herself and the kingdom as his reward, or
   of being put to death as the ravisher of the queen. Helmichis
   consented to destroy Alboin; but after the murder, finding they could
   not occupy the kingdom, and fearful that the Lombards would put them
   to death for the love they bore to Alboin, they seized the royal
   treasure, and fled with it to Longinus, at Ravenna, who received them
   favorably.
   During these troubles the emperor Justinus died, and was succeeded by
   Tiberius, who, occupied in the wars with the Parthians, could not
   attend to the affairs of Italy; and this seeming to Longinus to
   present an opportunity, by means of Rosamond and her wealth, of
   becoming king of the Lombards and of the whole of Italy, he
   communicated his design to her, persuaded her to destroy Helmichis,
   and so take him for her husband. To this end, having prepared poisoned
   wine, she with her own hand presented it to Helmichis, who complained
   of thirst as he came from the bath. Having drunk half of it, he
   suspected the truth, from the unusual sensation it occasioned and
   compelled her to drink the remainder; so that in a few hours both came
   to their end, and Longinus was deprived of the hope of becoming king.
   In the meantime the Lombards, having drawn themselves together in
   Pavia, which was become the principal seat of their empire, made
   Clefis their king. He rebuilt Imola, destroyed by Narses, and occupied
   Remini and almost every place up to Rome; but he died in the course of
   his victories. Clefis was cruel to such a degree, not only toward
   strangers, but to his own Lombards, that these people, sickened of
   royal power, did not create another king, but appointed among
   themselves thirty dukes to govern the rest. This prevented the
   Lombards from occupying the whole of Italy, or of extending their
   dominion further than Benevento; for, of the cities of Rome, Ravenna,
   Cremona, Mantua, Padua, Monselice, Parma, Bologna, Faenza, Forli, and
   Cesena, some defended themselves for a time, and others never fell
   under their dominion; since, not having a king, they became less
   prompt for war, and when they afterward appointed one, they were, by
   living in freedom, become less obedient, and more apt to quarrel among
   themselves; which from the first prevented a fortunate issue of their
   military expeditions, and was the ultimate cause of their being driven
   out of Italy. The affairs of the Lombards being in the state just
   described, the Romans and Longinus came to an agreement with them,
   that each should lay down their arms and enjoy what they already
   possessed.
   CHAPTER III
     Beginning of the greatness of the pontiffs in Italy--Abuse of
     censures and indulgences--The pope applies to Pepin, king of
     France, for assistance--Donation of Pepin to the pontiff--
     Charlemagne--End of the kingdom of the Lombards--The title of
     cardinal begins to be used--The empire passes to the Germans--
     Berengarius, duke of Fruili, c 
					     					 			reated king of Italy--Pisa becomes
     great--Order and division of the states of Italy--Electors of the
     emperor created.
   In these times the popes began to acquire greater temporal authority
   than they had previously possessed; although the immediate successors
   of St. Peter were more reverenced for the holiness of their lives, and
   the miracles which they performed; and their example so greatly
   extended the Christian religion, that princes of other states embraced
   it, in order to obviate the confusion which prevailed at that period.
   The emperor having become a Christian and returned to Constantinople,
   it followed, as was remarked at the commencement of the book, that the
   Roman empire was the more easily ruined, and the church more rapidly
   increased her authority. Nevertheless, the whole of Italy, being
   subject either to the emperors or the kings till the coming of the
   Lombards, the popes never acquired any greater authority than what
   reverence for their habits and doctrine gave them. In other respects
   they obeyed the emperors or kings; officiated for them in their
   affairs, as ministers or agents, and were even sometimes put to death
   by them. He who caused them to become of more importance in the
   affairs of Italy, was Theodoric, king of the Goths, when he
   established the seat of his empire at Ravenna; for, Rome being without
   a prince, the Romans found it necessary, for their safety, to yield
   obedience to the pope; his authority, however, was not greatly
   increased thereby, the only advantage being, that the church of Rome
   was allowed to take precedence of that of Ravenna. But the Lombards
   having taken possession, and Italy being divided into many parts, the
   pope had an opportunity of greater exertion. Being as it were the head
   of Rome, both the emperor of Constantinople and the Lombards respected
   him; so that the Romans, by his means, entered into league with the
   Lombards, and with Longinus, not as subjects, but as equals. Thus the
   popes, at one time friends of the Greeks, and at another of the
   Lombards, increased their own power; but upon the ruin of the eastern
   empire, which occurred during the time of Heraclius, their influence
   was reduced; for the Sclavi, of whom we spoke before, again assailed
   Illyria, and having occupied the country, named it Sclavonia, after
   themselves; and the other parts were attacked by the Persians, then by
   the Saracens under Mohammed, and lastly by the Turks, who took Syria,
   Africa, and Egypt. These causes induced the reigning pope, in his
   distress, to seek new friends, and he applied to the king of France.
   Nearly all the wars which the northern barbarians carried on in Italy,
   it may be here remarked, were occasioned by the pontiffs; and the
   hordes, with which the country was inundated, were generally called in
   by them. The same mode of proceeding still continued, and kept Italy
   weak and unsettled. And, therefore, in relating the events which have
   taken place from those times to the present, the ruin of the empire
   will be no longer illustrated, but only the increase of the
   pontificate and of the other principalities which ruled Italy till the
   coming of Charles VIII. It will be seen how the popes, first with
   censures, and afterward with these and arms, mingled with indulgences,
   became both terrible and venerable; and how, from having abused both,
   they ceased to possess any influence, and were wholly dependent on the
   will of others for assistance in their wars.
   But to return to the order of our narration. Gregory III. occupied the
   papacy, and the kingdom of the Lombards was held by Astolphus, who,
   contrary to agreement, seized Ravenna, and made war upon the pope. On
   this account, Gregory no longer relying upon the emperor of
   Constantinople, since he, for the reasons above given, was unable to
   assist him, and unwilling to trust the Lombards, for they had
   frequently broken their faith, had recourse to Pepin II., who, from
   being lord of Austria and Brabant, had become king of France; not so