Essays, commentary, videos, information about political events, freethought, social democracy, history, and anything else I feel like writing about. Poems too, and a few short stories.
05 November 2011
04 November 2011
The Greek Fumble

Imagine that: a country’s head-of-government actually practicing democracy in a country that professes to be democratic.
That display of backbone didn’t last too long. The day after saying that, Mr. Papandreou had a testiculectomy and caved in to the money powers-that-be, the people to whom governments and officials truly answer.
Should the people over whom he manages affairs for the gods on the financial Mt. Olympus tar, feather, and ride him out of town on a rail, well, that’s his problem. To the financiers, he’s as expendable as any other pawn and as interchangeable as a trophy wife.
Almost as disgusting the Greek Prime Minister’s spinal deficiency were French President Sarkozy and German President Merkel in their mutual display of subservience to the point of savage defense and preventative offense that led to Papadreou’s backing down. They divided the harvest of Papandreou’s testiculectomy between them.
Now that the two have successfully bullied their first head-of-government into submission for their economic overlords, I expect their next targets will be Spain’s Zapatero, Portugal’s Silva, and Italy’s Berlusconi. Perhaps the two are planning to recreate the Carolingian empire, and on a more Continental scale.
A secretive, unelected elite—and its elected servants and frontpersons—ruling over Europe and making even “kings” bow to its wishes…why am I reminded of the Knights Templar?
The Templars are still around, by the way, in their historically-documented successors in Portugal (the Military Order of Christ) and Aragon (the Order of Montessa). The successors, however, had the good sense to stay away from finance and the accompanying temptation coming with it to use that power as leverage to bully others into submission.
Their predecessors had found it a little too hot to handle.
Their predecessors had found it a little too hot to handle.
27 October 2011
The Fourth Branch of American government
(Written in the early weeks of the Occupy Wall Street Movement in 2011)
When I was in elementary school, I learned that America is governed by three coequal branches: the legislative, the executive, and the judicial, none of the three any more important or dominant over the others. This lesson was reinforced in middle and high school, as well as in nearly every one of my political science courses at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. All true, at least according to the written constitution of our federal republic.
When I was in elementary school, I learned that America is governed by three coequal branches: the legislative, the executive, and the judicial, none of the three any more important or dominant over the others. This lesson was reinforced in middle and high school, as well as in nearly every one of my political science courses at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. All true, at least according to the written constitution of our federal republic.
Experience
and observation during life since university have taught me that there is,
according to our unwritten but nevertheless concrete
constitution, a fourth branch of our federal republic, one more important than
the other three put together, at least given the weight to which its needs are
considered and to which its wants are catered, to such a degree that it in fact
dominates the other three to the point of eclipse.
The
legislative branch passes our laws and approves expenditure, the executive
branch executes the laws and conducts foreign affairs, and the judiciary
interprets laws and hears appeals. The fourth, the corporate branch, sets
the agenda and determines the direction of the other three, using them as mere
extensions of its will, its frontline troops facing off against nothing more than
the people over which it rules, the 99%. The real governing principle of
the United States is not “of the people, by the people, and for the people”,
but of the people, by the government, for the wealthy corporate elite.
The three
branches of the written constitution, both political parties, all commercial
media (radio, television, print, digital), every level of lower government,
many social and civic associations, even many religious denominations, adhere
to the same fiction that the People of the United States actually have a
voice. All of the above support either implicitly or explicitly the idea
that capitalist ethics based on individual and collective greed is the best
determining factor for deciding any social, economic, and political question.
Occasionally,
there is some small change which benefits the actual People of the United
States, but only if those advocating the mild, cosmetic change in question can
demonstrate more profit to be made for or loss to be avoided by the corporate
branch.
Commentators,
pundits, and blowhards from across the American political spectrum look without
seeing and speak without knowing because what is going on in America today is
outside of the fiction they accept, that the political system of the United
States is democratic even in the face of a mountain of evidence to the
contrary.
They want
“issues” defined in order to pigeonhole the movement and dismiss it or discover
how little they can get away with giving in order for it to go away. Or
they want to co-opt it and use for their own narrow agenda as the Koch
brothers, Dick Armey, and Newt Gingrich did to the Tea Party through Americans
for Progress, Freedom Works, and Friends of Freedom.
They want
leaders selected in order to make it easier to cut off the head or else to use
them in order to subvert, dishearten, deflate, and defuse the movement the way
the regime in the Islamic Republic used Moussavi, Karroubi, Khatami, and the
other “reformists” to destroy the Green Movement.
They do
not understand that the paradigm has changed. The people of America,
inspired by the others in the world who have stood up against their oppressors
and are in turn inspiring others around the globe to likewise follow their lead
and stand up, are refusing to play along with the lie any more. It’s
certainly not about “issues”, and it has less than zero to do with electoral
politics.
It’s about
changing the entire system, the real system rather the ideal in which it is
more convenient for our rulers for us to believe, which works primarily for the
interests of the Fourth Branch of government, the corporate branch. It’s
even less about setting up a system under which a vanguard of persons who
pretend to know better than the people themselves what’s good for them take
charge. It’s about taking the first steps toward establishing a
cooperative commonwealth that benefits each and every citizen and the citizenry
as a whole rather a narrow wealthy elite.
Contrary
to what its detractors claim, democracy is not about allowing the tyranny of
the majority over any kind of ethnic, racial, religious, or other similar
population group minority. That is not a democracy but an ochlocracy, or
rule by the mob.
The Occupy
Wall Street, or 99%, movement is not just about America, either. It’s about
the whole world. Just as we have accepted the baton from our brothers,
sisters, and cousins in North Africa, Southwest Asia, and Europe and are
holding it with them, we are in turn sharing it and holding it with countless
other humans in many, many other countries.
Out of
many we are One. There is but one race, the Human race.
In every
major city and state of the United States and Puerto Rico, in every province in
Canada, in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Colombia, Brasil, Argentina,
Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Portugal, Spain, France, Germany, Greece,
England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Ireland, Belgium, Croatia, Russia, Serbia,
Poland, Belgium, Denmark, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Italy, Netherlands,
Slovenia, Finland, Sweden, Switzerland, South Africa, India, Pakistan,
Indonesia, Philippines, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, China, Mongolia,
Malaysia, Australia, and New Zealand are marching in the name of the
99%. They have joined those in Israel, Palestine, Tunisia, Algeria,
Egypt, Morocco, Libya, Arabia, Yemen, Bahrain, and Syria, even in Iran where
the movement is waiting its chance to reawaken, seeking their dignity, freedom,
and self-determination.
We are all
Terrans, citizens of Earth. The whole world is our home, and all its
people our brothers, sisters, and cousins.
25 October 2011
Occupy America, and the world
“Let
them eat cake!” – Marie Antoinette Hapsburg Bourbon, Paris, France, 1789
Sometime
this past spring, looking at the actions and reactions of various governments
to the current Great Recession, I wrote that, “Governments around the world are
on a binge of slashing budgets and cutting programs that work to the benefit of
everyone in the name of protecting the abundance of wealth of a few. One of
these days we the people are going to wise up and stop letting the rich con us
into believing that they deserve wealth which amounts to hundreds or thousands
of times their fair share. When that happens, maybe the needs of the many will
finally outweigh the greed of the few.”
I had no
idea it would take place so soon after I wrote that, nor as strongly voiced and
as widespread across the world.
The 400
richest persons in America (0.000001% of the population) have as much as the
bottom 150,000,000 people (50% of the population). That top 1% we’ve been
hearing so much about control 60% of the wealth of the country, leaving a mere
40% of the wealth for the bottom 99% upon which they sit.
And most recently, figures from the 2010 census indicate that the poor in our country number 148 million.
And most recently, figures from the 2010 census indicate that the poor in our country number 148 million.
During a
discussion about why people allow the wealthiest to con the rest of us into
believing they somehow deserve their gross overabundance, hundreds of times
their fair share, when so many go about in want and need, I quipped that
everyone wants to be a slave-owner. That was the real reason so many who
would have never had the chance to own even one slave supported the planter
aristocracy of the South in its rebellion.
The same
goes for those who have always supported the interests of the
commercial-financial-industrial elite who have always controlled nearly every
facet of life in the country we call America, often even against their
own interests.
Or as
author John Steinbeck put it, “Socialism never took hold in America because
here the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily
embarrassed millionaires.” Whether you advocate or oppose socialism, you
have to admit that his observation about the view of the poor, shared by the
working- and middle-classes, about themselves is dead accurate.
In
addition, people in America are trapped in and by what radio personality Jean
Shepherd called the “creeping meatball”. This, he explained, “is the
passive acquiescence of people who surrender to the demands of the consumer
culture and collaborate in their own manipulation.” The Youth International
Party of the late 1960’s picked up on this with their slogan, “Rise up and
abandon the creeping meatball!”.
I should
be up front about the fact that I am a socialist, a member in good standing of
the Socialist Party USA. In fact, I am a social anarchist. To
paraphrase a line in the graphic novel V for Vendetta, anarchism is
not chaos and does not mean without rules; it literally means (and I looked it
up in the dictionary to check) “without rulers”.
Rulers
have subjects. One cannot be a subject and still be a citizen, because
citizenship implies a stake in the ownership of society as a whole. What
we are seeing in the streets and parks and public squares of America today is
the occupation of spaces by Americans who are tired of being treated as subjects
of an unelected, self-interested, avaricious minority and its loyal servants in
the halls of governmental Authority.
In short,
the ultimate reason behind the Occupy Wall Street movement is that the Wall
Street 1% got a $700,000,000,000 bailout, while the Main Street 99% got the
bill, along with a request to sacrifice. That request to sacrifice was
followed closely by another to keep sacrificing in order to maintain the
lifestyles of the rich and shameless who did the robbing in the first place, accompanied
with guilt-trips and condescension.
The
current so-called “debt crisis” has been imposed upon the governments of the
world by a web of financial markets—including stock exchanges and brokerages,
commercial and investment banks, insurance companies, credit and finance
companies—running rampant with speculation, fraud, irresponsibility, avarice,
and selfish ambition. They appeal to the governments of the world to be
bailed out of the quagmire they have created for themselves by cutting back
spending on programs and infrastructure which benefit the general welfare in
order to provide a life-raft for an industry of proven detriment to the 99% of
the population.
The aim of
this salvation is for them to continue doing that which brought us, America and
the rest of the world, to this low point in the first place. To help
manipulate the decisions toward that end, they threaten governments which such
extortionist actions as downgrading their credit rating if they don’t prostrate
themselves in compliance before the gods of wealth and commerce. In other
words, the governments of the First World are now facing the same kind of
blackmail visited upon those of the Third World by the same culprits.
How out of
touch with reality the government and the minds which drive the world’s
financial markets are can be clearly seen in the declaration by the U.S.
National Bureau of Economic Research that the Great Recession ended in June
2009.
Tell that
to the 30 million unemployed, the 60 million more under employed, and the countless
millions more underpaid in America.
The roots
of the current Great Recession reach back to the early 1980’s with the advent
of Reaganomics, the “supply-side” policies of Ronald Reagan and the
neoconservatives in his administration that mark the beginning of the New
Gilded Age. Trickle-down economics for a trickle-down democracy.
The idea
was to give the private sector, Corporate America, the main role in forming
economic and social policy. Free enterprise, open markets, abolition of
tariffs, turning governmental functions over to private corporations,
deregulation of industry and finance, slashing of support for higher education,
and destruction of organizations of the working- and middle-classes were
hallmarks of Reagan’s administration.
Ironically,
economists call this “neoliberalism”.
Reagan is
only the most notorious (in America) example. Every president since him
has followed the same general direction, including both Democrats. The
same is true in most countries around the world; for example, Tony Blair
continued along the same path laid out by his two immediate predecessors,
Margaret Thatcher and John Major.
Deregulation
of greed is one of the worst ideas humanity has ever conceived.
Let’s
check out some of the results of what Reagan started.
When I was
in at University of Tennessee at Chattanooga my first semester, fall 1981 in
the first year of Reagan’s regime, tuition was $325 per semester, before he
took his scythe out and started cutting. Back when the federal support to
higher education which had done so much to advance the standard of living in
this country was intact. This fall, now that my son is at the same
school, tuition is $3359 per semester. Of course, tuition would naturally
increase through the years, but an exponential increase of over 1000% is way
too much.
Does
anyone want to argue that making the postal service into a nongovernmental
corporation was a good idea? Hey, Mr. Reagan, how’s that working out?
Remember
when the savings & loan industry was strong? A lot of you may not
even remember that such a thing once existed. Yes, there are still
savings & loans, but the number of these people’s banks is rather small
compared to their former count. Reagan and his acolytes deregulated it
and immediately the thieves did to that industry what Wall Street did recently
to the finance and credit industry.
Deregulation
of the housing market helped bring about the bubble and burst of the Clinton
and Bush years. Ditto with dot com.
Deregulation
of the credit and finance industry which allowed it to offer promiscuous lines
of credit which responsible businesses not primarily motivated by unbridled
greed would never have considered holding out. Then when their
irresponsibility began to bit them in the ass, they turned to their pawns in
Congress to protect them and turn Americans into debt slaves.
The chaos
of the stock markets of the past several years, both in America and around the
world, is unlike anything seen since before 29 October 1929.
One of the
clearest examples of just how bad an idea giving corporate interests and
financial markets primary control over economic and social policy is food
prices. As with college tuitions, food would naturally be expected
increase overall through the years. But in 2008, they took a quantum leap
upward due not to decreased supply (there was and still is more actual food
than previously) but to market speculation.
Capitalism was an improvement over feudalism in Late Middle Ages Europe and over the planter economy of the antebellum South in 19th century America. Yesterday’s reform has become today’s ideology of oppression.
Capitalism was an improvement over feudalism in Late Middle Ages Europe and over the planter economy of the antebellum South in 19th century America. Yesterday’s reform has become today’s ideology of oppression.
In a
letter to one Col. J. S. Wilkins, President Abraham Lincoln wrote, “I see in
the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble
for the safety of my country. Corporations have been enthroned and an era of
corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will
endeavour to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people
until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed.”
This
happened soon after the Paris Commune of 1871 and the Great Upheaval of 1877 in
the United States in a series of Supreme Court decisions leading up to Santa
Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad (1886) andPembina
Consolidated Silver Mining Co. v. Pennsylvania (1888).
As Ryan
Grim and Mike Sachs laid out in their recent Huffington Post article,
Justice Stephen Field invented the idea of corporate personhood as a matter of
U.S. law. On little or no grounds, he wrote into opinions and commentary
material to be later given as precedent to support their cause, the prospect
that the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution intended to
give citizenship and equal protection of law to the former slaves gave the same
citizenship and equal protection of law to money.
This was
the series of decisions which formed one of the main bases upon which the
current Supreme Court led by Chief Justice John Roberts justified their
outrageous decision that dollars equal speech under the 1st Amendment
in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010).
And to be
fair, it is not only the conservative wing of the Court suffering from
rectal-cranial inversion syndrome. It was the LIBERAL wing of the current
Court that ruled in Kelo v. City of New London (2005) that
governments could take private property of citizens (subjects) under the power
of eminent domain and turn it over to private for-profit corporations.
A “long
train of abuses and usurpations” indeed. I have digressed thus to show
that even the body which is supposed to safeguard the rights of American
citizens is as much a part of the problem as any other branch of government.
In the
face of the Great Recession, those governments I spoke of earlier are
responding the same way in which their predecessors initially responded to the
Great Depression of the 1930’s: with painful, punitive measures of
austerity. What saved America, and the world, from absolute degradation
was the reversal of this by programs such as the New Deal.
Those
programs were not, as many of its detractors claim, intended to destroy
capitalism and the gross overabundance of wealth held by the few, but to
preserve it. They did, however, have the trickle-down effect of making
the lives of individuals people better as well as lay the foundation of the
prosperity which broke out following the War.
Several
pundits, as well as many Americans “occupying” streets and parks and public
places in America have noted that the Occupy Wall Street movement is inspired
by the rising up of people in various countries during the Arab Spring.
As Karl Vick describes in his recent TIME magazine article, a
more accurate parallel is the Occupy Tel Aviv movement during the summer of
2011.
At its
height, the movement in Israel had over 100 separate camps and over 350,000
people marching in the streets. Out of a population of around
7,000,000. Theirs were specifically economic causes, like their American
counterpart. Many of the same economic causes over which the various
risings that inspired the Israelis were the initial causes for the risings by
the people of Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, Yemen, Jordan, Bahrain, and Syria,
though their causes were political as well.
Had the
Iranian people not risen up nonviolently against the Islamic Republic and
continued to do so for as long as they did, it is possible that the events of
the Arab Spring could have been much bloodier and even more chaotic.
The
risings in those countries, as well as those against austerity in Spain,
Portugal, and Greece, helped inspire the citizens of Israel.
Israeli
Arabs, by the way, played a significant part in the movement that swept across
Israel this past summer, and many of the Israelis Jews who participated have
also been in the lead of those inside Israel supporting the nonviolent movement
of the Palestinians for equal human rights.
That
reminds me of a story that starts, “A Palestinian, an American, an Iranian, and
an Israeli got onto a boat in Paris, France…”
The citizens taking
part in the Occupy Wall Street and related protests around the country are more
the heirs of the Sons of Liberty who carried out the Boston Tea Party on 16
December 1773 than the movement which has adopted Tea Party as its name.
Sam Adams and his men had risen up, as Englishmen, in protest
of laws enacted by Parliament to secure a trade monopoly for corporations based
in the mother country, primarily the British East Indian Company, to the
detriment of merchants and citizens in the American colonies.
Unlike
Adams and the other Sons, however, the Occupy Wall Street movement is neither
violent nor destructive. The protest against corporate power is the only
similarity.
Pundits,
news reporters, and supporters of corporate power have complained that the
Occupy Wall Street Movement has no specific goals and no clear leaders, even
though in truth everyone knows what the problem is. Others have suggested
its participants take their concerns to the government.
I ask
this, Why should Occupy Wall Street address itself to government which
has been reduced to a mere frontline of pawns defending Corporate America from
those who would be citizens rather than subjects? Go back and read the
description I gave earlier about exactly who is in charge of social and
economic policy in this country.
Part of
the criticism is coming from Wall Street itself, and I suspect its denizens do
not know what to do with an “attack”, as it were, behind their lines.
Israeli
protestor Stav Shaffir, quoted in Vick’s article, has sound advice for the
movement and an answer for its critics: "As a movement that goes up
against the most powerful force, if you act like an organization, like an
institution, you lose. If you have one head, they know what to cut off. You
have to be like water, to be everywhere, to be unpredictable. We work like an
open code. Everybody should act their part. Everybody should act like a
leader."
If
neoliberal capitalism and the hierarchical trickle-down democracy under which
it is currently governed are the permanently engraved ideals of the Republic of
the United States of America, then there is no room for improvement, no chance
for growth, no space for hope, no anything but more of the same, no hope.
The first step on the road to taking backing personhood for each individual in America, and then the rest of the world, should be taking away personhood from corporations. By constitutional amendment if necessary. If corporations were actual persons, not a single one of them would be out of prison, and many of those in prison would be in maximum security.
The first step on the road to taking backing personhood for each individual in America, and then the rest of the world, should be taking away personhood from corporations. By constitutional amendment if necessary. If corporations were actual persons, not a single one of them would be out of prison, and many of those in prison would be in maximum security.
The time
has come to take a stand, for citizenship against for subjection, for
government to function for the GENERAL welfare rather than that of a narrow
group, for the 99% of the people, for the needs of the many over the greed of
the few. After all, you can't abandon the creeping meatball if you don't first
rise up.
As Bobby Sands once said: “Everyone has his or her particular part to play. No part is too great or too small. No one is too old or too young to do something.”
As Bobby Sands once said: “Everyone has his or her particular part to play. No part is too great or too small. No one is too old or too young to do something.”
Our day
will come.
Appendix:
From the
Preamble to the Declaration of Independence:
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that
all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of
Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever
any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of
the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying
its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to
them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence,
indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed
for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that
mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right
themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a
long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object
evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it
is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for
their future security.”
References:
Ryan Grim
and Mike Sachs, “Corporate Citizenship: How Public Dissent In Paris Sparked
Creation Of The Corporate Person” (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/12/corporate-citizenship-corporate-personhood-paris-commune_n_1005244.html).
Karl Vick,
“What Occupy Wall Street Can Learn from Occupy Tel Aviv” (http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2097627,00.html).
07 October 2011
The real end of the Roman Empire in the West
Christopher
Columbus discovered America. The issuance of the Emancipation
Proclamation freed the slaves in the American South. The Order of Knights
Templar was exterminated in the early 14th century. Japan
initiated the war against the United States of America in 1941. The War
Between the States was not about slavery but about states’ rights.
These are
but a few of the historical misconceptions and outright deceptions with which I
and many like me grew up. The truth of these four “facts” is more like this:
Columbus
and crew were lost, on their way to what they believed were the East
Indies. Up to 145 million natives may have lived in the so-called New
World in 1492; by 1600 that number had been reduced to 1.5 million, largely due
to pandemics.
The Emancipation
Proclamation was a propaganda exercise that actually freed no one, not the
slaves in the Union states but only those in territory still in Confederate
hands. Like if the USA has announced during the Cold War that all those
behind the Iron and Bamboo Curtains were now free from Communist rule.
The
Templars were never persecuted in Portugal and survive to this day as the
Military Order of Christ. In fact, the afore-mentioned Columbus was a member of
that order and therefore a Templar. In the kingdom of Aragon, the
Templars were converted into the Order of Montessa. In Scotland, after
the Order was dissolved in England, English and Scottish Templars merged with
the Scottish Hospitallers to become the joint Order of St. John and the Temple
that lasted until the Reformation.
The United States declared an oil embargo against the Empire of Japan in 1941 and set about enforcing it, the first blood drawn, so to speak. Such an embargo is a very provocative act of war.
The United States declared an oil embargo against the Empire of Japan in 1941 and set about enforcing it, the first blood drawn, so to speak. Such an embargo is a very provocative act of war.
States’
rights were but one argument of many that the elite in the South used to
justify continuation of human slavery. Anyone who doubts that the
secessions in 1860 and 1861 were to preserve slavery needs only to read the
proclamations.
I’ll never
forget my first day in Marvin Cousins’ American Government class my senior year
in high school. He began the course by listing several myths of American
history one-by-one, after which he would rip it apart, beginning with the
phrase, “YOU HAVE BEEN LIED TO!”
The Roman
Empire, or Imperium Romanum, fell in 476 CE.
Well, not
exactly. The empire continued to exist until 1453, with the fall of its
seat, Constantinopolis. Vestiges of the empire survived well into the
modern era. So, what fell in in 476 CE was merely the fall of the Western Roman
Empire with its last emperor. Only that’s not entirely true either.
Imperator Caesar Flavius Romulus Augustus did have a successor and
Roman institutions were maintained for quite some time. The Senate of
Roma, in fact, lasted into the 7th century.
So here’s
what really happened.
In 285 CE,
Imperator Gaius Aurelius Valerius Diocletianus Augustus (Diocletian) divided
the Imperium Romanum into Eastern and Western halves under himself at Nicodemia
in the east and Imperator Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus Herculius
Augustus, the lesser of two equals, in the west at Roma.
Emperors
in the Late Roman Empire had Imperator (and later also Caesar) as their
pronomen with Augustus as their cognomen.
In 293
Diocletianus divided the Imperium Romanum into four parts, known as the
Tetrarchy, two of which fell under an Imperator Augustus, and two smaller under
Caesars. He further moved the capital of the West from Roma to Meliandum
(Milan) and reduced the size of the empire’s provinces and groups them into twelve
dioceses, each under a vicarius.
The
Tetrarchy system fell apart in 313, though the system of smaller provinces
grouped into twelve dioceses remained. In 324 Imperator Caesar Flavius
Valerius Aurelius Constantinus Augustus (Constantine) of the West defeated his
opposite in the East, Imperator Caesar Gaius Valerius Licinianus Licinius
Augustus, to become sole imperial ruler, choosing to rule from the East.
Constantine
moved his seat from Nicodemia to Byzantium in 330, establishing Nova Roma,
later called Constantinopolis, in its place, making it the capital of the whole
Imperium Romanum.
After his
death in 337, the Imperium Romanum was divided into three praetorian
prefectures: the western Prefecture of Galliae (including Britanniae,
Hispaniae, Germaniae); the central Prefecture of Italiae (including the Balkans
and Africa); and the eastern Prefecture of the Orient (Thracia, Anatolia,
Syria-Palestina, Aegyptus, Libya). The Imperium carved the Prefecture of
Illyricum (Illyria, Dalmatia, Graecia, and Dacia) largely out of that of
Italiae in 356.
The
Praetorian Prefects of these units were subordinate to the Imperator Caesar
Augustus and had authority only over their civil administration. Each
prefecture had its own Magister Militum, head of military, each of whom
reported to the Magister Militum of the Imperium, who answered to the emperor.
In the
mid-4th century, the military of the empire was
reorganized. In the Diocese of Britanniae, the military was divided into
three commands, those of the Comes Litoris Saxonici, Dux Britanniarum, and
Comes Britanniarum, who reported to the Magister Militum of the Prefecture of
Galliae. Across the Oceanus Britannica (the English Channel), the Dux
Belgicae Segundae and the Dux Tractus Armoricani et Nervicani, along with the
Classis Britannica at Bononia Gesoriacum (Boulogne-sur-Mer), fell under the
overall command of the Comes Litoris Saxonici.
These
commands on the outskirts of the empire are relevant to later events.
In 366,
Damasus I, Bishop of Rome, convinced Imperator Caesar Flavius Valentianus
Augustus in the West to give him the title Pontifex Maximus, previously held by
the emperor, becoming the first Pope in the modern sense of the word.
Following
the death of Imperator Caesar Flavius Theodosius Augustus in 395, the Imperium
Romanum was once again split into Eastern and Western halves, only this time
the division was permanent.
In 402,
Flavius Stilcho, Magister Militum of the West, withdrew some legions from
Britanniae to face the Gothi in Italiae. Meanwhile, Imperator Caesar
Flavius Honorius Augustus moved his seat from Meliandum to Ravenna purposes.
In 409,
the Vandali, Buri, Suevi, and Alani ravaged the Diocese of Galliae until they
being driven into Iberia by the Visigothi. Cut off by the chaos, the
people of Britanniae and of Armorica (Britanny) armed themselves and overthrew
their civilian magistrates. Imperator Caesar Flavius Honorius Augustus
told them to attend their own affairs from thenceforth.
The
following year, the Visigothi invaded Italiae and sacked Roma.
The
revolts in Armorica and Britanniae were suppressed in 417, followed by the
return of some level of imperial presence in both regions. A year later,
Imperator Caesar Flavius Honorius Augustus granted his Visigothi allies land in
Aquitania to settle as foederati.
Flavius
Aetius, sometimes referred to as the “last of the Romans” became Comes and
Magister Militum of the Prefecture of Galliae in 425. He was to become the last
of the great Roman generals in the West.
Four years
later, largely due to Comes Aetius’ campaigns, the Vandali and their client
Alani crossed from Hispaniae into North Africa, and within ten years conquered
all of Roman Africa.
The same
year, Pope Celestine I dispatched Bishops Germanus of Auxerre and Lupus of
Troyes to Britanniae to combat the Pelagian heresy at the request of Palladius,
a British deacon. While in Britanniae, Germanus, in his former life a Roman
military officer, led the Britons to victory in battle against the Scotti
(Irish) near the later Welsh border.
In 435, a
local named Tibatto successfully led the Armorican movement for independence
from the Diocese of Galliae.
After
conquering Africa Proconsularis in 439, completing his conquest of Roman
Africa, Genseric adopted the title King of the Vandals and Alans, making his
seat at Cartago, the former seat of Roman government.
In 446,
the Britons appealed to Comes Aetius for military assistance in their struggle
against the Pictii and the Scotti who were raiding their lands from both land
and sea, but he had his hands full with Attila the Hun. Instead, German of
Auxerre returned the next year, accompanied by Severus, Bishop of Trier.
After expelling the Scotti from the mountain territory of the Cornovii, he
established Paganes (Powys), with Catellius, son of Categirn (Cadell
Ddernllwg), son of Vortigern, as Tribune, later succeeded by Bruttius, another
grandson of Vortigern.
In 451,
the armies of Comes Aetius, Magister Militum of Galliae, and of the Visigoth
king Theodoric I, which include Alani, Francii, and Burgundones, turned back
the army of Attila the Hun in the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains.
The
Vandali sacked Roma again in 455. Comes Aetius was not around to prevent
this because he had been assassinated in Roma on orders of Imperator Caesar
Flavius Placidius Valentinianus Augustus.
Aegidius,
Magister Militum per Galliae, established the Ducatas Noviodunum over the same
territory as the later Nuestria (Galliae north of the Loire River) the
following year, 456, after being cut off from the rest of the empire.
Both its citizenry and Ravenna considered it an exclave of the western empire,
and it may well have been in regular contact with pro-Roman elements in the
Diocese of Britanniae.
Historians
estimate that it is around this time, possibly up to twenty five years later,
that Ambrosius Aurelianus, whom Gildas refers to as the “last of the Romans”
(in Britanniae), is active as the foremost leader of what remains of Roman
Britain.
The
Visigothi acquired Septimania, also called Gallia Narbonensis, in 462, leaving
them in control of the entire south of the Diocese of Galliae.
Dux
Aegidius died in 464 at the Battle of Orleans against the Visigoths as ally of
Childeric I of the Francii to his immediate east, and was succeeded by his
second-in-command, Paulus, Comes of Angers, who subsequently also died in
battle against the Visigoths to be succeeded as Dux by Syagrius, son of
Aegidius.
* * * *
*
In the
fateful year 476, Odoacer of the Scirii, head of the foederati (non-native,
mostly Germanic, troops) in the Prefecture of Italiae whose ranks included
Heruli, Ostrogothi, Franci, and Lombardi, captured Ravenna and overthrew
Flavius Orestes, Magister Militum in the West, and Imperator Caesar Flavius
Romulus Augustus.
He then
invited Imperator Caesar Flavius Zeno Augustus in Constantinopolis to become
sole ruler of the reunited Imperium Romanum and recognize him as King of Italy
under imperial authority. Zeno granted Odoacer the pronomen Patricius and the
title Dux Italiae, while recognizing Imperator Caesar Flavius Julius Nepos
Augustus as ruler of the West. Patricius Odoacer maintained all of the
imperial institutions, including the Senate at old Roma.
The
Visigothi destroyed the last remnants of the Prefecture of Galliae the next
year, except for the Ducatas Noviodunum in the north.
In 480,
Imperator Caesar Nepos Augustus was murdered in Dalmatia in the Balkan
peninsula where he had made his residence, after which Patricius Odoacer moved
to take over Sicilia and Dalmatia.
The
Ducatas Noviodunum was finally conquered by Clovis I, king of the Francii, in
486, leaving him in control of all Gaul north of the River Loire. Dux
Syagrius fled to the protection of the Visigothi to the south, only to be
executed by Alaric II.
Theodoric,
Consul of the Imperium Romanum at Constantinopolis and now king of the
Ostrogothi, invaded the Prefecture of Italiae in 488 at the behest of Imperator
Caesar Flavius Zeno Augustus after Patricius Odoacer became too independent.
In 493,
the Ostrogothi under Consul Theodoric completed their conquest of Odoacer’s
domain, and now Patricius Theodoric, like his predecessor, ruled as viceroy to
Zeno with the title Dux Italiae.
In 500,
the Romano-British commander Agricola reconquered Dyfed, formerly known as
Demetia, from the Irish Deisi and became its governor as Tribune. Such Roman
imperial titles are attested to well into the 6th century.
Imperator
Caesar Flavius Anastasius Augustus raised Clovis of the Franci to the rank of
Consul of the Imperium Romanum after he conquers the Visigothic kingdom of
Toulouse under Alaric II in the Battle of Vouille in 507, leaving only Septimania
(Gallica Narbonensis) and Hispaniae in Visigothic hands.
The same
year Theodoric, commander of the Classis Britannica (probably then based in
Britanniae), campaigned in Armorica.
Patricius
Theodoric, Dux Italiae, re-established the Prefecture of Galliae in its former
capital of Arelate (Arles) in 510.
Flavius
Petrus Sabbatius Iustinianus (Justinian), who would become very significant to
the remains of the Imperium in the West, became Imperator Caesar Augustus
of the Imperium Romanum in 527.
In 534,
his Magister Militum, Flavius Belisarius, brought an end to the Kingdom of the
Vandals and Alans and established the Prefecture of Africa, which included
Corsica and Sardinia, with its seat at Cartago.
From 535
to 554, Belisarius conducted the Gothic War with the Ostrogothi for control of
the Prefecture of Italiae.
The
revived Prefecture of Galliae fell to the Francii in 536. In the same
year, Magister Belisarius finished reconquering Sicilia and established what
became the Thema of Sicilia.
In 552,
the Imperium Romanum had reconquered enough of Hispaniae to establish the
autonomous province of Spania in Iberia, under a magister militum.
In 554,
imperial forces under Magister Militum Narses, a scion of the Arsacid dynasty
of Armenia, finally completed the conquest of the Prefecture of Italiae.
In 580,
the Senate of Roma sent two ambassadors to the court of Imperator Caesar
Flavius Tiberius Constantinus Augustus at Constantinopolis.
Imperator
Caesar Flavius Mauricius Tiberius Augustus transformed the western holdings of
the empire in 584, creating two exarchates, with governors combining civil and
military powers.
The
Prefecture of Africa became the Exarchate of Africa, adding to it the formerly
autonomous province of Spania and the Islas Baleares.
The
Prefecture of Italiae became the Exarchate of Italiae, with its constituent
parts being the Ducatas Romanus, the Ducatas Pentapolis, the Ducatas Perusia,
the Ducatas Neapolitanus, and the Ducatas Bruttium (Calabria).
In 603,
the register of Pope Gregorius, Bishop of Roma and Pontifex Maximus, recorded
the acclamation by the Senate of Roma of new statues of Imperator Caesar
Flavius Phocas Augustus and his wife Leonitia Augusta, the last to be erected
in the Roman Forum.
With the
succession of Imperator Caesar Flavius Heraclius Augustus in 610, Greek became
the official language of the Imperium Romanum.
The
province of Spania fell to the Visigothi in 624.
In 629,
Heraclius assumed the title Basileus tuv Basileuv (Shahanshah or King of
kings) in honor of his defeat of the Sassanids, ending the long-running
Romano-Persian Wars, two years previously. He also changed the pronomen
from Imperator Caesar to Basileus and the cognomen from Augustus to Sebastos,
with the empire now called the Basilea Rhomaion.
In 637,
Muslim Arab armies invaded the Basilea Rhomaion and conquered
Syria-Palestina. Two years later they conquered Aegyptus and Armenia.
Basileus
Konstantinos Pogonatos Sabastos moved the seat of the Basilea Rhomaion from Konstantinopoulis
to Siracusa in Sicilia in 663, but it returned to the former after his death in
668.
In 697,
Basileus Leontios Sebastos established the Ducatas Venetia in northeastern
Italiae, under the Exarchate at Ravenna, with Paolo Lucio Anafestom as Doux
(Dux) and Hypatos (Consul).
The
Exarchate of Africa fell to the Muslim armies of the Umayyads the following
year, except the city of Septum (Ceuta), which remained in the Basilea Rhomaion
as an autonomous entity under a comes.
In 710,
Julian, last Comes of Septum, switched his loyalty from the Basilea Rhomaion to
the Umayyad dynasty when he needed closer allies in his fight against the
Visigothi, leading to the invasion of Hispaniae.
The
Exarchate of Italiae came to an end in 751 when it was conquered by the
Lombards. The holdings of the Basilea Rhomaion in Italia were reduced to
the Themas of Sicilia, Calabria, and Lucania, along with the Ducatas Venetia.
Themata
were the administrative divisions of the Basilea Rhomain, which had replaced
the system of provinces in the mid-7th century.
In 754,
Pope Zachary, Bishop of Roma and Pontifex Maximus, anointed Pepin the Short
king of the Francii and bestowed on him the title of Patricius Romanorum.
A portion of the Ducatas Neapolitanus secedes in 758 as the independent Ducato di Amalfi.
A portion of the Ducatas Neapolitanus secedes in 758 as the independent Ducato di Amalfi.
In 763,
the Ducatas Neapolitanus switched its allegiance from Konstantinopoulos to
Roma, becoming part of the Papal States.
Charlemagne
of the Franci conquered the Lombard Kingdom of Italy in 774.
The
Ducatas Romanus disappeared in 781 when Charlemagne granted it to Pope Benedict
VII as part of his temporal domains, the Papal States.
In 800,
Pope Leo I crowned Charlemagne as Imperator Romanorum, nominally subordinate to
Basilissa Irene Sebastos. Charlemagne and his successors used the less
presumptuous title Imperator Romanum gubernans Imperium. Basileus Michael I
Rangabe Sebastos recognized Charlemagne as Imperator in the West in 812.
In 811,
the former Ducatas Venetia of the Basilea Rhomain became independent as the
Republic of Venice.
Arab
armies captured the realm of the Lombards in southern Italiae in 847, and the
region became the Emirate of Bari.
In 871,
the Basilea Rhomaion retook its lost lands in southern Italiae and formed them
into the Thema of Longobardia.
Berengar
I, King of Italy and last successor of the imperial line of Charlemagne, died
in 924 with no successor appointed or crowned.
In 962,
Pope John XII crowned Otto I, Duke of Saxony, as Imperator Romanorum, founding
the Imperium Romanum Sacrum, or Holy Roman Empire.
In 965,
Sicilia fell to Muslim invaders, who established the Emirate of Sicily. In
response, the Basilea Rhomaion united the themata of Calabria, Lucania, and
Longobardia under the Strategos of Bari as Kapetan and Patricius, forming the
Katepenate of Italia.
The Great
Schism of the Christian Church took place in 1054 when the Patriarch of Roma
and the Patriarch of Konstantinoupolis excommunicated each
other. Since religion and government were deeply entertwined in both the
Basilea Rhomain and the West, the split was political as well.
The
Katepanate of Italiae came to an end in 1071 when the forces of the Basilea
Rhomaion were ousted from the territory by the Normans. With its exit,
the last vestiges of the old Imperium in the West are gone.
* * * *
*
In 1077,
the Seljuk leader Suleyman bin Kutalmish established the Sultanate of Rum in
Anatolia in territory taken from the Basilea Rhomain.
The First
Crusade began in 1095 when Basileus Alexios I Komnenos Sebastos in Konstantinoupolis asked
Pope Urban II, as a fellow Roman, for assistance against the Seljuk Turks, and
he responded with the Council of Clermont to call up volunteers.
At the end
of the war 1099, the Crusaders established the Kingdom of Jerusalem, Principality
of Antioch, County of Edessa, and County of Tripoli.
A couple
of crusades later, the Treaty of Ramla between Richard the Lionheart and Salah
al-Din in 1192 effectively ended the rule of the Crusaders, except for a tiny
portion of the Mediterranean coast around the city of Acre, which maintained
the title of Kingdom of Jerusalem. Meanwhile, the French established the
Kingdom of Cyprus the same year.
The Fourth
Crusade began in 1202 with the intention of reconquering the Holy Land, but
instead attacked the Basilea Rhomain.
After the
capture of Konstantinoupolis in 1204, the western Crusaders divided
the conquered territory into the possessions of the Republic of Venice
(primarily Crete) and those of the Imperium Romaniae (Latin Empire) and its
vassel states: Kingdom of Thessalonika, Principality of Achaea, Duchy of
Athens, and Duchy of Naxos. Rhodes became the headquarters of the Knights
Hospitaller.
The
surviving “Greek” portions of the empire include the Empire of Nicaea, the
Empire of Trebizond, and the Despotate of Epirus.
The
“Greek” Despotate of Epirus conquered the “Latin” Kingdom of Thessalonika in
1224, while in 1261 the “Greek” Empire of Nicaea reconquered the “Latin”
Imperium Romaniae and reestablished the Basilea Rhomaion.
In 1291, the
Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt captured Acre, the last territory of the Crusaders in
the Levant, ending the Kingdom of Jerusalem. In 1302, the island of Arwad
off the coast of Syria, the very last stronghold of the Knights Templar in the
Levant, fell.
The Sultanate
of Rum fell to the Ottomans in 1307.
In 1340,
the Basilea Rhomaion reabsorbed the “Greek” Despotate of Epirus, and in 1432
reconquered the “Latin” Principality of Achaea.
The
Council of Florence which met 1431-1445 defined
Papal Supremacy and attempted to resolve differences between the Patriarchate
of Rome and those of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem to affect
a reunion, but it ultimately failed. The
chief sticking points were the Filioque clause in the Niceno-Constantinopolitan
Creed, Purgatory, and Papal Primacy, the first being the question on which
agreement was never reached.
Konstantinoupolis fell
to the armies of the Ottoman Empire in 1453 and the Basilea Rhomain, or
Imperium Romanum, finally came to an end. Mehmed II, Sultan of the
conquering Ottomans, assumed the title Kaysar-I Rum (Caesar Romanus), which all
his successors carred.
The
Ottomans conquered the “Latin” Duchy of Athens three years later.
In 1461,
the “Greek” Empire of Trebizond, fragment of the Basilea Rhomain independent
since 1204, fell to the Ottoman Empire.
The French
sold the Kingdom of Cyprus to the Republic of Venice in 1489. The Ottomans
conquered it in 1570. The Ottomans annexed the “Latin” Duchy of Naxos,
last remaining vassal state of the former “Latin” Imperium Romaniae, in 1579.
In 1669,
the Republic of Venice lost Crete, its last major overseas outpost, to the
Ottoman Empire.
The last
Doge of the Republic of Venice, founded as the Ducatas Venetia of the Exarchate
of Italiae of the Basilea Rhomain in 697 and independent since 814, abdicated
in 1797 after surrendering to Napoleon Bonaparte of France. It had lasted
longer than the empire which spawned it.
Napoleon
conquered the Imperium Romanum Sacrum (Holy Roman Empire) in 1806 and ordered
it to dissolve. It reorganized as the Confederation of the Rhine.
Following
the Great War, Mustafa Kemal Attaturk overthrew the Ottoman Empire, ending both
the Sultanate and the Caliphate, replacing it with a secular Republic of Turkey
in 1922. The title of Kaysar-I Rum (Caesar Romanus), the last vestige of
the old Imperium Romanum/Basilea Rhomain, was abolished with the other titles.
The name of Constantinople was changed to Istanbul, which means The City in
Turkish, the name by which it had commonly been designated even when the
Basilea Rhomain was still called the Imperium Romanum.
The Bishop
of Rome, or Pope, still carries the title of Pontifex Maximus.
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