of the armies of Syria and the fleets of Africa, were consumed without effect before the walls of Antioch.
The royal city of Aleppo was subject to Seifeddowlat, of the dynasty of Hamadan, who clouded his past
glory by the precipitate retreat which abandoned his kingdom and capital to the Roman invaders. In his
stately palace, that stood without the walls of Aleppo, they joyfully seized a well-furnished magazine of
arms, a stable of fourteen hundred mules, and three hundred bags of silver and gold. But the walls of
the city withstood the strokes of their battering-rams: and the besiegers pitched their tents on the neighboring
mountain of Jaushan. Their retreat exasperated the quarrel of the townsmen and mercenaries; the guard
of the gates and ramparts was deserted; and while they furiously charged each other in the market-
place, they were surprised and destroyed by the sword of a common enemy. The male sex was exterminated
by the sword; ten thousand youths were led into captivity; the weight of the precious spoil exceeded the
strength and number of the beasts of burden; the superfluous remainder was burnt; and, after a licentious
possession of ten days, the Romans marched away from the naked and bleeding city. In their Syrian
inroads they commanded the husbandmen to cultivate their lands, that they themselves, in the ensuing
season, might reap the benefit; more than a hundred cities were reduced to obedience; and eighteen
pulpits of the principal moschs were committed to the flames to expiate the sacrilege of the disciples
of Mahomet. The classic names of Hierapolis, Apamea, and Emesa, revive for a moment in the list of
conquest: the emperor Zimisces encamped in the paradise of Damascus, and accepted the ransom of a
submissive people; and the torrent was only stopped by the impregnable fortress of Tripoli, on the sea-
coast of Phnicia. Since the days of Heraclius, the Euphrates, below the passage of Mount Taurus, had
been impervious, and almost invisible, to the Greeks. The river yielded a free passage to the victorious
Zimisces; and the historian may imitate the speed with which he overran the once famous cities of Samosata,
Edessa, Martyropolis, Amida, and Nisibis, the ancient limit of the empire in the neighborhood of the
Tigris. His ardor was quickened by the desire of grasping the virgin treasures of Ecbatana, a well-known
name, under which the Byzantine writer has concealed the capital of the Abbassides. The consternation
of the fugitives had already diffused the terror of his name; but the fancied riches of Bagdad had already
been dissipated by the avarice and prodigality of domestic tyrants. The prayers of the people, and the
stern demands of the lieutenant of the Bowides, required the caliph to provide for the defence of the
city. The helpless Mothi replied, that his arms, his revenues, and his provinces, had been torn from
his hands, and that he was ready to abdicate a dignity which he was unable to support. The emir was
inexorable; the furniture of the palace was sold; and the paltry price of forty thousand pieces of gold was
instantly consumed in private luxury. But the apprehensions of Bagdad were relieved by the retreat of
the Greeks: thirst and hunger guarded the desert of Mesopotamia; and the emperor, satiated with glory,
and laden with Oriental spoils, returned to Constantinople, and displayed, in his triumph, the silk, the
aromatics, and three hundred myriads of gold and silver. Yet the powers of the East had been bent,
not broken, by this transient hurricane. After the departure of the Greeks, the fugitive princes returned
to their capitals; the subjects disclaimed their involuntary oaths of allegiance; the Moslems again purified
their temples, and overturned the idols of the saints and martyrs; the Nestorians and Jacobites preferred
a Saracen to an orthodox master; and the numbers and spirit of the Melchites were inadequate to the
support of the church and state. Of these extensive conquests, Antioch, with the cities of Cilicia and the
Isle of Cyprus, was alone restored, a permanent and useful accession to the Roman empire.