Compendium chronicum

 Gold-bearing, glistening with robes studded with pearls. the fragrant violet shone, the rose shone back. every kind of violet's color smiled from ever

 The fine-spun ones. the large-winged, large-hooked-beaked, hooked-clawed, boasting their claws like javelins, having a beak sharper than daggers, for

 Having made him a composite of soul and body, and having bestowed the grace of a will moved by itself, and having formed him according to his likeness

 Of yours, and you will be called gods, and you will know all things. the woman heard these things, she heeded the flattery, she was conquered by the

 Land-born, winged, walking but god, opening the floodgates of heaven, brought down from there whole seas of rain, covered the peaks of the deep-cliff

 They stole, they committed adultery, and finally they looked toward idolatry. seruch was the first to begin to use carved images and pillars, being th

 Javelin-bowmen, armor-bearers, spearmen, men furious in battle, and having taken an allied force from the nation of the huns, and having made allies o

 Chaldeans, and the plaything of fortune and the dice of affairs, having sufficiently mocked others, passed over to others. and when these things were

 Mandane, and that the liquid poured forth was so great as to be able to cover the face of the land of asia. this was the first dream, and a second one

 Not even among the most famous, like that of the medes and persians, or that of the assyrians. candaules was king of lydia and phrygia, tracing his li

 To be contrived by such devices. he, having learned and discerned which mare the horse of darius loved more than all the others, after the two of them

 Having heard that joseph, the one born of rachel, was governing the land of egypt for pharaoh, and also contriving to find a release from his sufferin

 Was sung. and a light of gladness rose for the hebrews, but the darkness of calamities overshadowed the egyptians. the israelites who fled egypt then

 He exposes him in a place called parion after paris himself. he was therefore cast aside carelessly. shepherds found him, pitied him, took him up. the

 Because helen had been seized by someone, all fought on her behalf with their own bodies. so after much entreating and importuning, they persuade the

 While strong-handed achilles was present, the counsels of the son of laertes were ineffective, and every plot devised and scheme stitched together aga

 The swarm of trojans mingled with each other, daring to do nothing. and there was a temple before the walls of beautifully-towered troy, where achille

 To proteus, he also finds his consort there in memphis, and having been hosted and honored he receives helen, and after considerable toils he reaches

 Flapping its wings, a great-winged bird, fanned the fire into flame with its wings. but a certain cunning fox, vying with these and contending against

 To be called, remaining faithful, keepers of the house and guardians of what is within. then taking a clod of earth in his hand from outside, he throw

 The most unjust slaughter of his father, and perceiving as a man of sense that he would share the danger with his father and brother and would die wit

 Caesar wished to take into the fellowship of marriage a woman who was in the sixth month of her pregnancy, and he urged nero to betroth his wife to hi

 And his whole character was lecherous, and worse than others, lusting after women joined to men, and commanding their spouses to serve his abomination

 You will cause me pain for those who are sated on my rotten limbs will vex me for a short time, but if others fall upon me, they will cling more viol

 Bringing with them a chariot-driver mime, they came upon him to kill him. and nero, knowing this, killed himself, saying this at the end: what an art

 Extinguishes it, and dogs, running up and eating the bonds, release the stargazer who was invoking the gods many times. and these things indeed were a

 Ravaging and plundering, being in want of money, pressed by need and having no army from anywhere to arm against them, set forth in the marketplace th

 Of great things, what terror was not present, what was not dared! slaughters and toils everywhere, and pools of blood. and the gloom of the prison hel

 Their names were constans and constantine) manages the western parts and rome and the gauls. but these were extinguished rather quickly and before the

 But when that woman again added that her husband was plotting against gratian himself, he replied again, what is that to you, woman? and they say th

 Orestes, and after orestes the son of romulus was the last to take hold of the rule. and the great-named city, the city of the romans, having had romu

 They set aside the young woman. athenais the maiden, exceedingly distressed at these things and wounded in her soul, goes to her maternal aunt, she sh

 Learning of the emperor, she arrives in the city of jerusalem as quickly as possible, and there, having completed the remainder of her life, she pays

 When a fierce battle had broken out and he was leading the romans against the arrogant persians, marcian, seized by a death-threatening illness, remai

 A man, a treasure of wisdom, was slandered as a hellene, isocasius by name, a quaestor by rank and from there, stripped of both honor and money, he i

 Having reigned over the romans for eighteen years. but this one, having tasted power for a short time, departed from the earth rather quickly, leaving

 The poison with the trisagion hymn, and when he saw the whole crowd immediately run wild and drive the eparch from the temple with stones and burn dow

 Justin, but being inflamed with zeal for the pious religion, kindled an implacable war against the manichaeans and a persecution more severe than thos

 Manly minds for with this man he joined mighty battles, and so terrified chosroes that he wished to exchange peace for man-slaying wars. and rome the

 With graces and bear torches for creation, and appear as bright stars to those on earth but the sun leaped up from a most beautiful lake, and the tor

 Such power, and being filled with greater zeal, he held to what must be done. and it happened that not long after something like this occurred, worthy

 Into the judgments of the judge shook the hearts of all. from there a calm of justice-doing was spread everywhere, instead of a winter and a gloomy te

 And by the things that will be said and the khagan, having attacked the garrisons of the romans (the khagan was king of the northern scythians) and h

 Of dregs. therefore, he is caught fleeing together with the empress and the purple-born branches sprung from him. but the most god-hated, man-slaying

 With golden helmets, delicate, all quiver-bearing, on snorting, gold-phalerad horses. so when the emperor saw it was impossible to engage with the arm

 Having embarked in boats, they came on, covering the back of the sea with their dense light boats, with their single-log vessels. thus there were many

 But nevertheless he did not long enjoy his fortune, but it quickly grew cold, but appearing he was hidden, just as a rose might spring up and immediat

 Him, only one thing troubled, lest the scepter reach justinian again, and he who was formerly deprived of it, and of his nose along with it, might aga

 Infancy was subjected to murderous hands for slaughter but here, boys of fifteen, girls in their early bloom, young men, soft-skinned women, little g

 You will see a dreadful thing, and he bespattered the ground, flowing away like water. thus it was said well and wisely by the ancients, nothing beyo

 But the emperor theodosios, shrinking from the audacity and the beast-like heart of leo, yielded the throne and the crown to his enemy, willingly or u

 From the kandys and the torc i will know, and the croaking raven from its blackness. near the precinct of the wisdom of god a splendid house had been

 He plundered beauty, he cut out the sacred images from the churches, and in their place with the same colors and mosaics he engraved his beloved hunti

 From there he is rolled towards lawless deeds, and he shaves the head of his most temperate consort, and introduces the union with another woman into

 They drive him from the throne and the city as a fugitive. and he, having indicated these things in writing to the empress and having besought to rece

 They were supplicating, even employing force. but he, not knowing the turn of the balancing scale of fortune, and fearing its wavering will, approache

 And again the tail of the dragon was moved. the abomination, i mean, of iconoclasm, like a great dragon, crept, dreadful and gaping, it rushed to devo

 And from there what was being built was overturned from its roots, and having stained his own war-loving hands with murders and having made every spea

 The king, on account of the bruises and the numerous wounds, or rather cases of paralysis, was shaken in his soul at what had happened, and wishing to

 Finding their catch, they write to the just man while he is fishing with nets a short writing in iambic meter, which, since i have deemed it not right

 Having been persuaded and having received complete assurance that theophilos was delivered from the torments there, she became a fellow-diner with the

 Of the ancient kings, both the golden trees, and the chattering sparrows, and lions made of hammered gold, and simply every royal thing gleaming in th

 By his hand, but the contriver of evils paid the penalty, and the preparer of terrible things drank a cup of wrath. bardas, therefore, while digging a

 Scarcely the temple-keeper he immediately makes basil a member of his household, and deems him worthy of fitting care. and basil was handsome, noble,

 To earth-born men, and certain innate dooms accompany men. for this one, great in understanding among emperors, having been persuaded by certain serpe

 By the transgression of tetragamy. but leo, the most philosophical among emperors, having fallen into the natural necessities of the body and being af

 He arms himself on behalf of the one who had been out-generaled with an army drawn from many places, from the lycaonians, from the thracians, from the

 Raising him from a lowly state to the summit, he makes him father and guardian of the empire. and drawing romanos further into his affection, he gives

 Of unstained rule, and being about to be released from the bonds of nature, he appointed his son romanos as sole ruler. but he, entrusting all strengt

 He conveys everything, and says, alas, o general, for the fortune of the romans! until when will woman-souled eunuchs steer the ship of state, resour

 Medimni of grain to be sold for a nomisma. thus phocas managed the matter meanly, and this though he was rich in thousand-bushel granaries, laden with

 Near the ister cutting down the phalanxes, breaking the scytharchs, killing, pursuing, routing the champions, as if some lion falling upon broad-flank

 Slumber to his eyelids, nor sleep to his eyes, until he drove out the wolves, the devourers of sheep. the mighty ones of the bulgars recognized his st

 And having been taught by certain people that after him the rule would pass to romanos, one of the senate, surnamed argyropoulos, he compels the man t

 Having the care of those in the home for the aged, he managed all other matters of state up and down and was seen openly as the keeper of the ruler. t

 Rushing into the inner sanctuary, from there they seize the wretched man, crying out with groans from the heart, with hot tears, and they gouge out hi

 Bloody streams, but murderous outpourings. he seized the fortresses, he seized the cities. he went on, roaring in his anger, breathing fire more than

 Of the power to comnenus. but those who were allotted to steer the ship of state, wishing not to save it but to sink it and swamp the most wretched th

 But suddenly the tempests of the flesh, having grown wild, stirred up a hard-to-calm, wave-tossed wind, they brought on nausea, vomiting, dizziness, t

 To sheep-guarded folds. but a winged dove, flying up from somewhere, alighted on his knees with a silent flutter, not like the one before that flew to

 Promising down on his temples, using caesar his uncle as a rival and the most powerful men and those in high military command, he at once seats himsel

 Shining with purple dye and gold, and using in turn overlapping garments, he sat upon high, silver-studded thrones, adorning with dignities all who ca

Having embarked in boats, they came on, covering the back of the sea with their dense light boats, with their single-log vessels. Thus there were many bloody scourges from countless places, and from all sides affairs were dire for the queen city. The Persian was like a bitter, sting-bearing scorpion, and the fierce daring of the Scythians like a poisoning viper, and the Tauro-Scythian a foot-winged, swift-footed locust. With so many evils the city of the Byzantines struggled, and from all sides the means of aid were impossible. But a mighty arm was its shield, but its champion was a strong-handed palm. And so a fiercely-breathing wind blew, and it stirred up surges and many-turning whirlpools, and it sank the entire immense fleet. They sank like lead into the sea-brine, those who lightly sailed over the watery ways, as once did the proud-faced captains of Pharaoh. Thence poured forth the previously fearful Romans, who had shut themselves in the walls. Like starlings they appeared to the winged locusts, and like winged ibises they were to the serpents. And they shouted a song of victory, singing hymns and offering fitting odes to the general. Thus no giant is saved by the greatness of his strength, nor a ruler in the hands of a mighty army; for if God does not set firm the foundations of the houses, if he does not surround the dwellings with a strong coping-stone, then the works of skill are useless and the works of toil are toils. To this came the affairs of the Romans; and Heraclius, having ruled for thirty years, left the light together with his crown and his life. And when nature compelled Heraclius to give the dust of his body to the earth that lent it, his son Constantine handled the scepters, who for a short while being known as sole ruler and emperor, and having tasted of rule for one year of the crown, was quickly hidden in his turn, he departed before his time, having said or done nothing worthy of memory, as his stepmother, they say, Martina and Pyrrhus had mixed for him a death-bringing poison. And Pyrrhus was then the chief priest of Byzantium, a pestilent and impious man and a sorcerer and a wizard. So when Constantine left the life below, Martina intruded into the scepter-rule, and with her, her son Heraklonas, but for a short time; for hardly having managed to greet the power, they drink the cup of divine vengeance, gaining nothing else than to appear evil. So Heraklonas having been deprived of his nose, and Martina her tongue, were led into exile, and after them Constans is entrusted with the kingdom, he who was born to Constantine, the one who ruled a short while before; who, nurturing wicked roots from the beginning in his heart of the impious heresy or rather, madness of those who teach to say there is one will in Christ, then also brought forth fruits, but fruits of bitterness, from which many ate, except so far as to recognize what astringency the fruits and what bitterness they boasted, but Maximus the fair-tongued, the golden trumpet, the gold-flowing Nile of orthodoxy, partook of the bitterness to the ultimate fullness; for his right hand was reaped off with a sword, and his honeyed tongue, alas, was also taken away, the one that poured forth streams of divine nectar. This sinister Constans oppresses with perpetual exile Martin the bishop of elder Rome; the tongue of the Romans knows to call him pope. And imitating Cain in fratricide, and having killed Theodosius who had sprouted from the one field and from the same seeds as himself, he sails away to most fruitful Sicily, wishing to strip the royal city of its ornaments and to bestow the rule on thrice-wretched Rome, as if someone should strip of her ornaments a delicately-adorned bride and should beautify some thrice-old crone as a maiden. But the counsels of men are vain, if God does not cooperate, if he does not assent; for while refreshing his flesh with hot waters, there he drank a cold cup of death, having obtained twenty-seven years of rule. And Mizizius plays the tyrant, a man from Sicily, a man with graceful eyes, handsome in his face.

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σκάφεσιν ἐνθέντες, ἐπῄεσαν καλύπτοντες τὰ νῶτα τῆς θαλάσσης τοῖς λεμβαδίοις τοῖς πυκνοῖς, τοῖς αὐτοξύλοις πλόοις. οὕτως αἱμάστιγες πολλαὶ μυριαχόθεν ἦσαν καὶ πάντοθεν τὰ πράγματα στενὰ τῇ βασιλίδι. ἦν ὁ μὲν Πέρσης ὡς πικρὸς σκορπίος κεντροφόρος, ὡς δ' ἔχιδνα φαρμάκτρια Σκυθῶν θυμοτολμία, ἀκρὶς ὁ Ταυροσκύθης δὲ πεζόπτερος πτηνόπους. τόσοις κακοῖς ἐπάλαιε τὸ Βυζαντίων ἄστυ, πάντοθεν δ' ἦν ἀμήχανα τὰ τῆς ἐπικουρίας. ἀλλ' ὑπερήσπιζεν αὐτοῦ μεγασθενὴς βραχίων, ἀλλ' ἦν ὑπέρμαχος αὐτοῦ παλάμη κραταιόχειρ. καὶ τοίνυν ἐξεφύσησεν ἄνεμος ἀγριόπνους, καὶ κλύδωνας ἐξήγειρε καὶ στρόφους πολυστρόφους, καὶ πᾶσαν κατεπόντωσεν ἄπλετον στολαρχίαν. ἔδυσαν ὡς ἡ μόλιβδος εἰς ἅλμην θαλαττίαν οἱ κούφως ἐπιπλέοντες ὑγροκελεύθους πόρους, ὡς πρὶν σοβαροπρόσωποι τοῦ Φαραὼ τριστάται. ἐντεῦθεν ἐξεχύθησαν οἱ πρὶν πεφοβημένοι Ῥωμαῖοι καὶ τοῖς τείχεσιν αὑτοὺς συγκεκλεικότες. ὡς σελευκίδες ὤφθησαν ταῖς πτερωταῖς ἀκρίσιν, ὡς ἴβεις δὲ πτερόεσσαι τοῖς ὄφεσιν ὑπῆρξαν. καὶ μέλος ἐπινίκιον ἠλάλαξαν ὑμνοῦντες καὶ τὰς ᾠδὰς τῇ στρατηγῷ θύοντες καταλλήλους. οὕτως οὐ γίγας σώζεται τῷ πλήθει τῆς ἰσχύος, οὐδὲ δυνάστης ἐν χερσὶ στρατοῦ πολυδυνάμου· ἂν γὰρ θεὸς μὴ πήξειε τῶν οἴκων τοὺς θεμέθλους, ἂν μὴ θριγγίῳ κραταιῷ τοὺς δόμους περιβάλλει, καὶ τὰ τῆς τέχνης ἄχρηστα καὶ τὰ τοῦ κόπου κόποι. Εἰς τοῦτο μὲν ἀπέβησαν τὰ πράγματα Ῥωμαίοις· τριάκοντα δ' ἐν ἔτεσιν Ἡράκλειος κρατήσας φάος ἐξέλιπεν ὁμοῦ καὶ στέφος καὶ τὸν βίον. ἐπεὶ δὲ τὸν Ἡράκλειον ἠνάγκασεν ἡ φύσις δοῦναι τὸν χοῦν τοῦ σώματος τῇ γῇ τῇ δανεισάσῃ, ὁ παῖς αὐτοῦ χειρίζεται τὰ σκῆπτρα Κωνσταντῖνος, ὃς πρὸς μικρόν τι γνωρισθεὶς μόναρχος αὐτοκράτωρ καὶ τῆς ἀρχῆς γευσάμενος πρὸς ἓν ἔτος τοῦ στέφους ἀνθυπεκρύβη τάχιον, ἐξέλιπε πρὸ χρόνου, μηδέν τι μνήμης ἄξιον φθεγξάμενος ἢ δράσας, τῆς μητρυιᾶς, ὡς λέγουσι, Μαρτίνης καὶ τοῦ Πύρρου συγκερασάντων φάρμακον αὐτῷ θανατηφόρον. ὁ Πύρρος δ' ἦν ἀρχιερεὺς τότε τῆς Βυζαντίδος, λοιμὸς ἀνὴρ καὶ δυσσεβὴς καὶ φαρμακὸς καὶ γόης. Ὡς οὖν ἀπέλιπε ζωὴν τὴν κάτω Κωνσταντῖνος, Μαρτίνα παρεισφθείρεται τῇ σκηπτροκρατορίᾳ, καὶ μετ' αὐτῆς Ἡρακλωνᾶς ὁ παῖς, ἀλλ' ἐπ' ὀλίγον· μηδὲ γὰρ φθάσαντες σχεδὸν τῷ κράτει προσλαλῆσαι τῆς θείας ἐκδικήσεως ἐκπίνουσι τὸν σκύφον, ἄλλο μηδὲν κερδάναντες ἢ τὸ κακοὶ φανῆναι. ῥῖνα μὲν οὖν Ἡρακλωνᾶς, ἡ δὲ Μαρτίνα γλῶτταν ζημιωθέντες ἤχθησαν εἰς τὴν ὑπερορίαν, καὶ μετ' αὐτοὺς πιστεύεται Κώνστας τὴν βασιλείαν, ὁ Κωνσταντίνῳ γεννηθεὶς τῷ πρὸ μικροῦ κρατοῦντι· ὃς ῥίζας τρέφων πονηρὰς ἀρχῆθεν ἐν καρδίᾳ τῆς δυσσεβοῦς αἱρέσεως ἢ μᾶλλον ἀπονοίας τῶν διδασκόντων ἐν Χριστῷ θέλησιν μίαν λέγειν, ἤνεγκε τότε καὶ καρπούς, ἀλλὰ καρποὺς πικρίας, ἐξ ὧν πολλοὶ μὲν ἔφαγον πλὴν ὅσον ἐπιγνῶναι οἷον τὸ στῦφον οἱ καρποὶ καὶ τὸ πικρὸν αὐχοῦσι, Μάξιμος δ' ὁ καλλίγλωττος, σάλπιγξ ἡ χρυσοσάλπιγξ, ὁ Νεῖλος ὁ χρυσόρειθρος ὁ τῆς ὀρθοδοξίας, ἕως ἐσχάτης πλησμονῆς μετέσχε τῆς πικρίας· τὴν χεῖρα γὰρ τὴν δεξιὰν ἐξεθερίσθη ξίφει, καὶ γλῶσσαν μελιτόεσσαν οἴμοι προσαφῃρέθη, τὴν νέκταρος πηγάζουσαν ἐνθέου τὰς συρμάδας. Οὗτος ὁ Κώνστας ὁ σκαιὸς ἀειφυγίᾳ θλίβει Μαρτῖνον τὸν ἐπίσκοπον τῆς πρεσβυτέρας Ῥώμης· πάπαν αὐτὸν ἀποκαλεῖν οἶδε Ῥωμαίων γλῶσσα. καὶ Κάϊν μιμησάμενος ἐπ' ἀδελφοκτονίᾳ, καὶ κτείνας Θεοδόσιον τὸν ἐκ μιᾶς ἀρούρης καὶ τῶν σπερμάτων τῶν αὐτῶν αὐτῷ βεβλαστηκότα, εἰς Σικελίαν ἀποπλεῖ τὴν πολυφορωτάτην, τὴν πόλιν τὴν βασίλειον ἀποκοσμῆσαι θέλων καὶ τὴν ἀρχὴν χαρίσασθαι τῇ τριπεμπέλῳ Ῥώμῃ, ὡς εἴ τις ἁβροστόλιστον ἀποκοσμήσει νύμφην καὶ γραῦν τινὰ τρικόρωνον ὡς κόρην ὡραΐσει. ἀλλὰ τὰ διαβούλια μάταια τῶν ἀνθρώπων, ἂν μὴ συμπράττῃ καὶ θεός, ἂν μὴ συνεπινεύσῃ· θερμοῖς γὰρ ὕδασιν αὑτοῦ ψυχαγωγῶν τὴν σάρκα ψυχρὸν ἐκεῖ κυλίκιον ἐξέπιε θανάτου, ἔτεσιν εἴκοσι λαχὼν πρὸς τοὺς ἑπτὰ τοῦ κράτους. Καὶ τυραννεῖ Μιζίζιος, ἀνὴρ ἐκ Σικελίας, ἀνὴρ χαριτοβλέφαρος, ἀστεῖος τῷ προσώπῳ.

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