Page:The age of Justinian and Theodora (Volume 2).djvu/150

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The orthodox Christians suffered much from the persecution of their Arian conquerors,[1] but under the mild rule of Hilderic, who succeeded in 523, the peace of the Church throughout the Vandalic dominions at length became assured.[2] At their advent into Africa the simple barbarians were revolted by the manners of the inhabitants; and, as soon as they had secured themselves in their conquest, proceeded to assimilate everything to their native ideas of chastity and temperance. Within the first decade of their supremacy they had worked a general reformation at Carthage; exterminated the androgynous males, suppressed the brothels, and settled all the courtesans in a state of legitimate nuptials.[3] This ideal dispensation was, however, by no means permanent, and later generations of Vandals gradually became dissolved in the luxury, and yielded to the sexual allurements which had been abolished by their stern forefathers. Thus by the beginning of the sixth century the rude nomads had been transformed into untiring votaries of the theatre, the circus, and the chase, into revellers clad in silken vestments, who had planted themselves gardens and orchards, where they consumed their days in feasting and abandonment to sexual gratifications.[4]

Between Hilderic and Justinian a firm and friendly pact had been cemented during the lifetime of Justin, and the alliance was maintained from year to year by a liberal interchange of costly presents.[5] The unwarlike character, how-*

  • [Footnote: incensed with Maximus, who assassinated her husband, usurped the

purple, and paid her unwelcome attentions. Genseric married Eudocia, one of her daughters, to his son Huneric.]

  1. A special ecclesiastical account of this by Victor, Bishop of Vita; De Persec. Vand.
  2. Procopius, loc. cit., 9.
  3. Salvian, op. cit., vii, 22.
  4. Procopius, op. cit., ii, 6.
  5. Ibid., i, 9.