4 - Courage, Fear, and Generalship in the Vandal War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2020
Summary
[…] the courageous man's fears are great and many.
‒ Aristotle EE1228bThe emotion of ‘fear’ takes centre stage in the Vandal War. I am certainly not the first to notice this emphasis. Recent scholarship has underlined Procopius’ stress on the febrile anxiety that gripped Constantinople when the Emperor Justinian announced his military expedition to recover the former Roman territories of North Africa from the Vandals in the summer of 533.
According to Procopius, the generals, who had just waged a series of hard-fought land campaigns against Persia, were reluctant to launch a sea invasion of a realm that had been out of Roman hands for over a century:
Each of the generals, supposing that he himself would command the army, was in terror [ϰατωρρώδϵι] and dread [ἀπώϰνϵι] at the greatness of the danger, if it should be necessary for him—assuming he survived the perils of the sea—to encamp in enemy land and, using his ships as a base, to engage in a war against a kingdom both large and formidable.
The memory of a botched military expedition in 468 against the Vandals had clearly left its mark on the Roman psyche. This defeat had seen a formidable Roman naval force devastated by Vandal fire-ships just off the shores of North Africa, and had left both halves of the empire's pride dented, and their finances depleted. In spite of that, Procopius reports that the Roman generals were too frightened to speak up. Only the praetorian prefect John the Cappadocian, a man denigrated by the historian throughout the Wars, had the nerve to warn the emperor about the financial and political ramifications of such a venture. Heeding John's advice, Justinian relented, temporarily abandoning his plan.
It takes a religious vision to change the devout emperor's mind. Procopius describes how a visiting bishop related to the emperor a dream where God commanded the bishop to remind Justinian that ‘after undertaking the task of protecting Christians in Libya from tyrants’ the emperor ‘for no good reason had become afraid [ϰατωρρώδησϵ]’.God, the bishop reassured, would be fighting on Justinian's side ‘and make him master of Libya’.
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- Masculinity, Identity, and Power Politics in the Age of JustinianA Study of Procopius, pp. 99 - 124Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2020