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Surrender Of   Ravenna. -- Glory Of Belisarius. -- His Domestic Shame And Misfortunes.   When Justinian ascended the throne, about fifty years after the fall of the Western empire, the kingdoms of the Goths and   Vandals had obtained a solid, and, as it might seem, a legal   establishment both in Europe and Africa. The titles, which   Roman victory had inscribed, were erased with equal justice   by the sword of the Barbarians; and their successful rapine   derived a more venerable sanction from time, from treaties,   and from the oaths of fidelity, already repeated by a second or   third generation of obedient subjects. Experience and   Christianity had refuted the superstitious hope, that Rome   was founded by the gods to reign forever over the nations of   the earth. But the proud claim of perpetual and indefeasible   dominion, which her soldiers could no longer maintain, was   firmly asserted by her statesmen and lawyers, whose opinions   have been sometimes revived and propagated in the modern schools of jurisprudence. After Rome herself had been stripped   of the Imperial purple, the princes of Constantinople assumed   the sole and sacred sceptre of the monarchy; demanded, as   their rightful inheritance, the provinces which had been   subdued by the consuls, or possessed by the Cęsars; and   feebly aspired to deliver their faithful subjects of the West from   the usurpation of heretics and Barbarians. The execution of   this splendid design was in some degree reserved for   Justinian. During the five first years of his reign, he   reluctantly waged a costly and unprofitable war against the   Persians; till his pride submitted to his ambition, and he   purchased at the price of four hundred and forty

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