|
CERTAIN pious men of the clerical order, eighty in number,
among whom Urbanus, Theodore, and Menedemus were the leaders,
proceeded to Nicomedia, and there presented to the emperor a
supplicatory petition, informing him and complaining of the ill-usage
to which they had been subjected. The emperor was filled with wrath;
but dissembled his displeasure in their presence, and gave Modestus
the prefect a secret order to apprehend these persons, and put them to
death. The manner in which they were destroyed being unusual,
deserves to be recorded. The prefect fearing that he should excite the
populace to a seditious movement against himself, if he attempted the
public execution of so many, pretended to send the men away into
exile. Accordingly as they received the intelligence of their destiny
with great firmness of mind the prefect ordered that they should be
embarked as if to be conveyed to their several places of banishment,
having meanwhile enjoined on the sailors to set the vessel on fire, as
soon as they reached the mid sea, that their victims being so
destroyed, might even be deprived of burial. This injunction was
obeyed; for when they arrived at the middle of the Astacian Gulf,
the crew set fire to the ship, and then took refuge in a small barque
which followed them, and so escaped. Meanwhile it came to pass that a
strong easterly wind blew, and the burning ship was roughly driven but
moved faster and was preserved until it reached a port named
Dacidizus, where it was utterly consumed together with the men who
were shut up in it. Many have asserted that this impious deed was not
suffered to go unpunished: for there immediately after arose so great a
famine throughout all Phrygia, that a large proportion of the
inhabitants were obliged to abandon their country for a time, and
betake themselves some to Constantinople and some to other provinces.
For Constantinople, notwithstanding the vast population it supplies,
yet always abounds with the necessaries of life, all manner of
provisions being imported into it by sea from various regions; and the
Euxine which lies near it, furnishes it with wheat to any extent it
may require.
|
|